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#11
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WEll, Ernest, to be brutally honest with you, no it doesn't help much. You
simply took each individual segment of the gobbledygook FAR and drew a picture for each one of them. That's fine; what I'm looking for (and what Stuart Fields is VERY close to doing) is a composite graphic of ALL the horizontal requirements onto one graph and ALL the vertical requirements onto another. But thanks for trying. Jim -- "If you think you can, or think you can't, you're right." --Henry Ford "Ernest Christley" wrote in message ... If anybody has a point to a clear post of the brightness requirements, I'd sure be interested in seeing it. Sarangen's article on wingtip lights is about the best I can find, but he duplicates the alpha graph and says nothing about the theta graph. Jim Is this any help? http://ernest.is-a-geek.org/Delta/Ex...iment_LED.html -- http://www.ronpaultimeline.com |
#12
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On May 8, 10:26 am, "RST Engineering" wrote:
WEll, Ernest, to be brutally honest with you, no it doesn't help much. You simply took each individual segment of the gobbledygook FAR and drew a picture for each one of them. That's fine; what I'm looking for (and what Stuart Fields is VERY close to doing) is a composite graphic of ALL the horizontal requirements onto one graph and ALL the vertical requirements onto another. But thanks for trying. Jim -- "If you think you can, or think you can't, you're right." --Henry Ford "Ernest Christley" wrote in message ... If anybody has a point to a clear post of the brightness requirements, I'd sure be interested in seeing it. Sarangen's article on wingtip lights is about the best I can find, but he duplicates the alpha graph and says nothing about the theta graph. Jim FAR 23.1391 specifies theta (from dead ahead in horizontal plane) and 23.1393 specifies alpha (above or below horizontal plane). Therefore the first table is for alpha=0. The second table is simply a scale factor to figure out the alpha-distribution for each theta. This is why the first table is given in Candles and the second table has no units with the max value of 1.0. Basically, to figure out the minimum intensity for a given theta and alpha, multiply the two numbers from each table. One should be able to create a 3D plot from this. |
#13
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Andrew...
I agree with your FAR references, Andrew, but in an article you wrote entitled "Europa Nav Lights Using Luxeon Leds", page 11, (undated) you have two graphs. One is for theta = 0° and one is for theta = 90°. Both graphs are for alpha (x axis) versus candelas (y axis). You further define candela on the y axis as lumens/steradian. If you have a subsequent article that clarifies or extends the data in this article I reference, I'd sure like to see it. The "Europa..." article is the only one I could find. I'll be happy to port you the preprint articles for Kitplanes this year July, August, and September for your review and comment if you like. The October, and final chapter, is a work in progress, but it only has details on the power supply and nothing on the light distribution. Jim -- "It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it." --Aristotle "Andrew Sarangan" wrote in message news:4785ec47-9bbe-4f4a-b1a5- FAR 23.1391 specifies theta (from dead ahead in horizontal plane) and 23.1393 specifies alpha (above or below horizontal plane). Therefore the first table is for alpha=0. The second table is simply a scale factor to figure out the alpha-distribution for each theta. This is why the first table is given in Candles and the second table has no units with the max value of 1.0. Basically, to figure out the minimum intensity for a given theta and alpha, multiply the two numbers from each table. One should be able to create a 3D plot from this. |
#14
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Jim
I added a small section to the same article to hopefully answer some of your questions. I had no idea that it would be read by anyone except a handful of Europa builders, but I am glad to help if needed. http://www.sarangan.org/aviation/eur...tip-Lights.pdf On May 14, 9:48 am, "RST Engineering" wrote: Andrew... I agree with your FAR references, Andrew, but in an article you wrote entitled "Europa Nav Lights Using Luxeon Leds", page 11, (undated) you have two graphs. One is for theta = 0° and one is for theta = 90°. Both graphs are for alpha (x axis) versus candelas (y axis). You further define candela on the y axis as lumens/steradian. If you have a subsequent article that clarifies or extends the data in this article I reference, I'd sure like to see it. The "Europa..." article is the only one I could find. I'll be happy to port you the preprint articles for Kitplanes this year July, August, and September for your review and comment if you like. The October, and final chapter, is a work in progress, but it only has details on the power supply and nothing on the light distribution. Jim -- "It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it." --Aristotle "Andrew Sarangan" wrote in message news:4785ec47-9bbe-4f4a-b1a5- FAR 23.1391 specifies theta (from dead ahead in horizontal plane) and 23.1393 specifies alpha (above or below horizontal plane). Therefore the first table is for alpha=0. The second table is simply a scale factor to figure out the alpha-distribution for each theta. This is why the first table is given in Candles and the second table has no units with the max value of 1.0. Basically, to figure out the minimum intensity for a given theta and alpha, multiply the two numbers from each table. One should be able to create a 3D plot from this. |
#15
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On Wed, 14 May 2008 06:48:44 -0700, "RST Engineering"
wrote: Andrew... I agree with your FAR references, Andrew, but in an article you wrote entitled "Europa Nav Lights Using Luxeon Leds", page 11, (undated) you have two graphs. One is for theta = 0° and one is for theta = 90°. Both graphs are for alpha (x axis) versus candelas (y axis). You further define candela on the y axis as lumens/steradian. If you have a subsequent article that clarifies or extends the data in this article I reference, I'd sure like to see it. The "Europa..." article is the only one I could find. I'll be happy to port you the preprint articles for Kitplanes this year July, August, and September for your review and comment if you like. The October, and final chapter, is a work in progress, but it only has details on the power supply and nothing on the light distribution. Jim what is a steradian ?????? |
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