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==Tints== | ==Tints== | ||
[[File:Ledtints.jpg|thumb|300px|Side-by-side comparison of different flashlight tints. Click for full caption.]]Different LED's and different types of lights produce varying tints of light. Small differences in the production of LED's can produce differing tints. The LED's are evaluated and grouped in bins based on the resulting tint. Most LED's have a cool white tint which is slightly blue. However some people prefer a more neutral light. Because more phosphor is added to obtain a neutral tint and the phosphor blocks some of the blue light, neutral LED's are not as bright as cool white ones. Warm white has more of an orange color and is even less bright, adding yellow and other colors of phosphor. | [[File:Ledtints.jpg|thumb|300px|Side-by-side comparison of different flashlight tints. Click for full caption.]]Different LED's and different types of lights produce varying tints of light. Small differences in the production of LED's can produce differing tints. The LED's are evaluated and grouped in bins based on the resulting tint. Most LED's have a cool white tint which is slightly blue. However some people prefer a more neutral light. Because more phosphor is added to obtain a neutral tint and the phosphor blocks some of the blue light, neutral LED's are not as bright as cool white ones. Warm white has more of an orange color and is even less bright, adding yellow and other colors of phosphor. Tints are often measured by Correlated Color Temperature, which assigns a value in degrees Kelvin to different tints, from 6500K for cool white to 2700K for warm white, with 4500K being neutral. | ||
==Color Rendering Index (CRI)== | |||
A measure of the quality of light is how well it renders colors across the spectrum. Some types of light emit only a narrow wavelength, making all colors look about the same. Sodium vapor street lights might have a color rendering index value of only 25. Many cool white LED's and compact fluorescent bulbs have a CRI of about 60-70 due to their light having only a couple of spikes at certain light frequencies (colors). Incandescent light and sunlight have CRI values of the maximum of 100. There are "high CRI" LED's with values starting around 80 and going up into the low 90's. CRI is measured at a certain temperature since a red object will have a different appearance under a lower CCT incandescent lamp than higher CCT sunlight, even though both light sources have a CRI of 100. There is a good article [http://www.fullspectrumsolutions.com/cri_explained.htm here] about CRI, in addition to the more technical article in [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_rendering_index Wikipedia]. | |||
High CRI LED's typically have a warmer tint, though not always. And a warm tint does not necessarily mean the LED is high CRI. | |||
==Light Output== | ==Light Output== |