BeanAnimal
Premium Member
Nobody said that those "other" reflectors were good or that a DIY unit would not outperform a poorly made OEM unit.
Also rich, it's not the "cutting" tolernaces. It is the design itself. The shape of the reflector dictates the footprint (focus) of light that will be cast. I agree that open ended designes are leaving efficiency on the table.
As well as the "focus" the angle of each ray of light is important as well. Steep angles penetrate the water, and shallow angles bounce off. The shape of the reflector determines these angles.
The shape of the reflector also determines how many times a given light ray will bounce before it reaches it's target. Each bounce reduces the efficiency due to scatter.
The surface material dicates the amount of light the bounces (or is lost to scatter). This includes not only the actual choice of material, but also imperfections in the material. These would include bumbs, wrinkles, dents, waves... whatever.
Thicker mylar will lay flatter with less surface distortion. There however is a reason it is not used for primary reflectors, highly polished aluminum works better and is easier to maintain and fabricate.
Putting tinfoil above VHO lamps is better than having no reflector at all, this certainly does not make a tinfoil reflector good. It just makes it better than nothing.
If your contention is that his DIY unit will be better than poorly designed refector, then I would agree. I never disagreed.
Honestly, do you guys read the posts in the threads or just a few sentances and then shoot of on a tangent?
Also rich, it's not the "cutting" tolernaces. It is the design itself. The shape of the reflector dictates the footprint (focus) of light that will be cast. I agree that open ended designes are leaving efficiency on the table.
As well as the "focus" the angle of each ray of light is important as well. Steep angles penetrate the water, and shallow angles bounce off. The shape of the reflector determines these angles.
The shape of the reflector also determines how many times a given light ray will bounce before it reaches it's target. Each bounce reduces the efficiency due to scatter.
The surface material dicates the amount of light the bounces (or is lost to scatter). This includes not only the actual choice of material, but also imperfections in the material. These would include bumbs, wrinkles, dents, waves... whatever.
Thicker mylar will lay flatter with less surface distortion. There however is a reason it is not used for primary reflectors, highly polished aluminum works better and is easier to maintain and fabricate.
Putting tinfoil above VHO lamps is better than having no reflector at all, this certainly does not make a tinfoil reflector good. It just makes it better than nothing.
If your contention is that his DIY unit will be better than poorly designed refector, then I would agree. I never disagreed.
Honestly, do you guys read the posts in the threads or just a few sentances and then shoot of on a tangent?