Looks like a sweet setup!I have a magnifier circle light, and and overhead Flood light. Both are on expanding extending arms that can rotate. Plus overhead LED shop light. Also natural light from the basement window.
Looks like a sweet setup!I have a magnifier circle light, and and overhead Flood light. Both are on expanding extending arms that can rotate. Plus overhead LED shop light. Also natural light from the basement window.
I found on ebay led lights for my opti-visor no I can't live without itWhen I go into my shop , I put a 2.5 power binocular magnifier on my head. My old eyes need plenty of light and magnification to work properly. My neighbor installs those giant food coolers in grocery stores , and has replaced most of my overhead fluorescent lights , with the light bars he removes from obsolete food coolers. I have to close my eyes to turn them on , as the light intensity , and quantity is shocking to me , when first igniting them. Think they are LED bars. Just wish I had them 30 yrs ago. I still have one articulating arm incandescent lamp over my work bench , and one more above my engraving , and carving area. I solidly position an assembled gun using 3 , 25 lb. bags of shotgun BB's holding the gun in any way I need to carve , or engrave. Beneath the gun , the bench top is avg. thickness house carpeted , which again , with the bags of shot , makes everything very stable.
Thanks. It works for my 71 year old eyes at least.Looks like a sweet setup!
I believe that’s the direction I want to go. Having an architect light to move around looks easy to use in your videos. Jim do you still recommend an incandescent bulb? Or have you found any LED bulbs that work just as well?I hear a lot of comments about strong fill lighting. I would suggest using directional lighting. It will reveal all of your mistakes.
Haha sounds good. So what you’re saying is try and get some incandescent bulbs.For wood finishing, LED lights are absolutely terrible. I have a couple portable utility lamps and a mounted swivel-arm lamp all equipped with incandescent bulbs to supplement the overhead florescent shop light. LED light just doesn't qive the right quality of light. I've got a box full of old incandescent bulbs. Enough to last me until I'm too old and decrepit to do wood finishing.
They are actually still sold as "rough service" bulbs, which a "loophole" in the ban permits (as I've been told, but not verified). But, they are pricey.Haha sounds good. So what you’re saying is try and get some incandescent bulbs.
In one of Jim's build videos he explains the benefits of incandescent light bulbs for direct lighting and the use of architectural/adjustable stands.I believe that’s the direction I want to go. Having an architect light to move around looks easy to use in your videos. Jim do you still recommend an incandescent bulb? Or have you found any LED bulbs that work just as well?
nope! I had to hunt times long gone to find this one! throws a completely different light then LED's.If you had to replace that incandescent with an LED what bulb would you go for?
I had the chance to buy a big pack of them a year ago. I kinda regret not buying them.They are actually still sold as "rough service" bulbs, which a "loophole" in the ban permits (as I've been told, but not verified). But, they are pricey.
Do you think a 2700k bulb would be “close” to an incandescent? I’ve read it is, I know there is no one-all solution but if I can’t find incandescent bulbs, or pay out the ear for one, I’d like a good alternative. It seems most dislike LEDs for this close up work.nope! I had to hunt times long gone to find this one! throws a completely different light then LED's.
we have been off grid here for 30 years and everything else except my slide projector is LED.
Roger that. Thank you for your insight!i don't know about the 2700k bulbs but led casts a different spectrum of light it seems and when i am doing finish work i take the stock etc. out into the sunlight with a soft pencil and circle all the holiday's in my work. could also just be my eye balls.
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