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#1
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After trying to build my own LED anchor light, and finding the
so-called superbright LEDs I bought were too dim, I decided to just buy a commercial one in spite of the high cost. So, I bought the Orca Green Marine light (yeah, expensive) with solar cell to turn it off in day. I plan to hook it up to my batteries via a long wire and pull it up into the foretriangle. I'll ley y'all know how it works. |
#2
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#3
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Add em to my collection of weird objects.
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#4
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This light appears to be well made with a top and base about 1/4" thick
Aluminum. It has a SINGLE LED and associated electronics that supposedly enables it to run at max brightness at volts of 8-46 V. |
#6
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![]() wrote: After trying to build my own LED anchor light, and finding the so-called superbright LEDs I bought were too dim, I decided to just buy a commercial one in spite of the high cost. So, I bought the Orca Green Marine light (yeah, expensive) with solar cell to turn it off in day. I plan to hook it up to my batteries via a long wire and pull it up into the foretriangle. I'll ley y'all know how it works. Next time do a bit of research before you buy junk. http://ledmuseum.home.att.net/ Everything you ever wanted to know about LED's including who makes the brightest today. Joe |
#7
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Speaking of homemade lights,
There was some discussion here last spring about my el cheapo homemade spreader light. It's a 12 bucks for the pair fog light from VIP although I had to pay another five bucks to have a hole drilled in the lens (I learned in the process that I easily could have done it myself but the drill bit would have cost six bucks). It works great, is brighter than I need, and smaller and more compact than anything else I could find. The discussion was about the fact that it's ground is connected to the case and thus the mast. I hooked up the old return wire to it so that the mast and rigging aren't actually carrying any of the light's load, only any slight differential. For something that is only on infrequently and briefly, this seems acceptable. If I was racing or doing a lot of night sailing where the light was critical and going to be on for long periods, I would have paid for a marine spreader light but this has worked out very well. It will be starting to rust by the end of this season but I have the other one from the pair in the basement. I paid 40 bucks for a masthead light that isn't nearly as well made or complex except that the little tube stanchion is stainless. -- Roger Long |
#8
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On Thu, 02 Feb 2006 21:56:26 -0500, Larry wrote:
homemade anchor light atop the mizzenmast.....a Home Depot, solar-recharged, LED walkway light, the kind you put up a sidewalk in front of your house. That's creative. Was the brightness insufficient? |
#9
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I bought a Home Depot (OK, Wal Mart) solar powered walkway light and
thought it was waaaay too dim. The LED in this Orca light is unusual in that the dome of the LED seems to have been machined to throw the light radially. The housing of the whole light is very well made. |
#10
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![]() wrote in message ps.com... I bought a Home Depot (OK, Wal Mart) solar powered walkway light and thought it was waaaay too dim. The LED in this Orca light is unusual in that the dome of the LED seems to have been machined to throw the light radially. The housing of the whole light is very well made. The ones I saw that pass the USCG requirements (visible at night for 2 miles) had only three LEDs, but they were mounted in a Fresnel lens cover. RCE |