Many of you know I own a business that installs 3M Clear Bras and headlamp protection for area dealerships as well as my main gig. In keeping with being on the cutting edge, I obtained some of the latest headlamp film (non-3M unfortunately) to test on my cars before offering it as a new feature to my clients. The film comes in grey, faint blue and amber. I was interested in the amber for offering to turn factory white fogs yellow while also providing the energy absorbent protection of the film.
As a test, I put the film on on of my Subaru's Hella FF200 fog lamps and I was quite impressed. I was expecting it to be the tacky orange color you see on Kmart (sorry Kmart) foglamps, rather than the deep yellow of a quality European foglamp. But it is indeed a perfect replica of the correct shade, so they did their homework. As a comparo, this evening I swapped the bulb of the other still white FF200 with a Hella Yellow Star, which puts out that yellow beam by itself. Survey says? - The beam colors are indistinquishable at night from about 50 meters - same color. It's uncanny.
My question for the forum is this. Once you alter the light frequency, you alter it, no matter how you did it, right? Of course it would take a light meter to determine which strategy knocked the most lumens out of it, but other than that, the yellow beam's effectiveness should be the same whether you colored it with a bulb next to the white filament, or used my strategy with the lense - right? Am I missing anything here?
Then I played with the blue film. It makes a normal halogen bulb put out light that is distinctly whiter and has the ol' HID appearance. Coincidentally, I was then perusing some Hella literature while sitting on the can taking a Beowulf and Hella is now offering blue lenses about the same shade. Hmmmm. I'm starting to get the impression that changing the color of a lamp's output can be accomplished with true optical grading by using film and lenses vs the coated bulbs. So I got up and wiped my Junk and went to look for other films.
Can anyone think of a reason that this would not be true? Seems too stupid and easy, but to my eyes there is no question the yellow film is right on. And the blue film also shifts the normal yellowish bulbs to a clean white you'll immediately notice if that's your thing (it's not mine).
The film itself is near optical grade for clarity and surface. I'm testing it for abrasion, heat and thermal stability at the moment.
So what do you guys think of this stuff from a physics perspective? Can I be looking at two identical colored light beams that use different strategies to achieve them and assume their output is therefore functionally identical?
That oughta keep you guys busy....
DougM
As a test, I put the film on on of my Subaru's Hella FF200 fog lamps and I was quite impressed. I was expecting it to be the tacky orange color you see on Kmart (sorry Kmart) foglamps, rather than the deep yellow of a quality European foglamp. But it is indeed a perfect replica of the correct shade, so they did their homework. As a comparo, this evening I swapped the bulb of the other still white FF200 with a Hella Yellow Star, which puts out that yellow beam by itself. Survey says? - The beam colors are indistinquishable at night from about 50 meters - same color. It's uncanny.
My question for the forum is this. Once you alter the light frequency, you alter it, no matter how you did it, right? Of course it would take a light meter to determine which strategy knocked the most lumens out of it, but other than that, the yellow beam's effectiveness should be the same whether you colored it with a bulb next to the white filament, or used my strategy with the lense - right? Am I missing anything here?
Then I played with the blue film. It makes a normal halogen bulb put out light that is distinctly whiter and has the ol' HID appearance. Coincidentally, I was then perusing some Hella literature while sitting on the can taking a Beowulf and Hella is now offering blue lenses about the same shade. Hmmmm. I'm starting to get the impression that changing the color of a lamp's output can be accomplished with true optical grading by using film and lenses vs the coated bulbs. So I got up and wiped my Junk and went to look for other films.
Can anyone think of a reason that this would not be true? Seems too stupid and easy, but to my eyes there is no question the yellow film is right on. And the blue film also shifts the normal yellowish bulbs to a clean white you'll immediately notice if that's your thing (it's not mine).
The film itself is near optical grade for clarity and surface. I'm testing it for abrasion, heat and thermal stability at the moment.
So what do you guys think of this stuff from a physics perspective? Can I be looking at two identical colored light beams that use different strategies to achieve them and assume their output is therefore functionally identical?
That oughta keep you guys busy....
DougM