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You need to do it as a blind study. Your preknowledge of which is driven
how may color your perception in something as subtle as that. -- ** FREE Fishing Lures ** Weekly drawing ** Public Fishing and Boating Forums ** www.YumaBassMan.com "Meindert Sprang" wrote in message ... "Old Nick" wrote in message ... Actually not quite. If you talk energy consumption then you are right. But you can viciously overdrivve LEDs to get far more brightness out of then than they normally can give. see: http://www.stockeryale.com/i/leds/lit/app001.htm I know, I have used that principle to drive IR leds to illuminate a scenery for the time of one frame of a video camera. There is also argument that your eye and brain think that the led is still alight and this can fool you into seeing a brighter LED. I would reckon this would work best for LEDs being looked _at_, rather than thiose used as a source of illumination. Mmm.... I'd thought that the eye/brain combination would average it, but on the other hand, the mind can do strange thinks. I'll might try it some day by comparing two LEDs next to eachother, one continuously driven and the other with a duty cycle. Meindert |
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