![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#31
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Here's where I got mine:
http://www.pocketlights.com/terralux_ministar2.asp Blanche wrote: Got a product number or something for the Luxeon bulb that fits into the MagLite? thanks |
#32
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Blanche wrote in news:1104360173.687273
@irys.nyx.net: Got a product number or something for the Luxeon bulb that fits into the MagLite? Google LED conversion and you'll find many choices. The LED Museum, http://www.ledmuseum.org, has reviews and links for many sources. -- Regards, Stan |
#33
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Foster wrote:
: Agree on the LED conversion of the mini-Mag. I replaced the bulbs with : the TerraLUX MiniStar 2. I also got pyrex lenses to replace the too soft : plastic ones. : Another option, the Inova 24/7. It's multi functioned with low and high : intensity white and a pretty bright red. It also has several signal : modes that are more useful when earth bound. It uses a 123 lithium cell : - which are obscenely expensive if you buy them in a store, but can be : gotten almost as reasonably as AAs online. They have a long shelf life, : last forever with an LED and are lighter than AAs. My problem with all the LED lights and conversions for the mini-mags is that they are all *too* bright. My plane has red flood and a dozen or so red bulbs behind the panel. I've bought into the theory that the least possible amount of light you can use the better your night vision will remain. A second's blast of white from a minimag will blow out my night vision. I took a regular mini-mag, and bought a T-1 sized green LED... just the bare LED. It was the brightest I could find, but most conversions use 4 or more LEDs to replace the white bulb. Anyway, the spacing of the terminals on the LED is the same as the white bulb, so that fits in great. Trouble is putting a resistor inline to limit the current of the 2.1v bulb with 3.0v batteries. I ended up taking a 39 ohm resistor to limit the current to about 25 mA. Using a small piece of double insulation (think lamp cord, but for about 24 gauge solid wire), I folded the leads back on each other with the double insulation between them: _______ -___R___- |________ | - Resistor config ________| o o ooooooooo o ooooooooo - Insulator config threaded between resistor leads as shown. Conductors lay on opposite sides in the crease between the double wire sheath insulation. It fits nicely between the two AA's in the light and inserts the resistance inline. Works great, it's just bright enough to see a chart, doesn't ruin night vision, runs forever, and the green+red is enough color to discern just about everything you need. -Cory -- ************************************************** *********************** * Cory Papenfuss * * Electrical Engineering candidate Ph.D. graduate student * * Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University * ************************************************** *********************** |
#34
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I tend to use a little flashlight that Rayovac makes. (I don't remember
their part number, but you can buy them at Wal-Mart for less than $10.. they're green with a clip, swivel head, and both a red and white lens, and they run on a couple of AA batteries). When you clip it to your headset, it gives you straight-ahead lighting, which is somewhat adjustable and perfect for helping you see the panel. I use it as a backup source of panel light, and supplemental lighting when flying night IFR in poorly lit airplanes. They are, howver a bit too bright and too red (if you use the red lens) for map reading. Just my two cents. -Rob -Rob "Josef Burger" wrote in message .. . What do you use for extra and backup lighting in the cockpit for IFR flights at night? Some airplanes have pretty decent lighting built in. Others can have decent cockpit lighting and poor panel lighting. Others have shadows in poor locations, or areas of the panel/cockpit you'd really like to have illuminated, but aren't. Myself, I keep a LED flashlight around my neck, and other flashlights nearby and handy. I keep on trying other items and discarding them. Perhaps .. I've just never found the right item. Things I've been thinking about ... A yoke/yoke-board mounted light, such as a flex-lite or some LED bar might work well for lighting the panel either in normal flight or when the lights go out. Some velcro on adhesive strips, stick it to the cockpit ceiling, and put something like a pelican VersaBrite II up there to provide some area illumination. Some better lighting for a yoke/knee board would be nice, maybe a flexlite, or same flood light on velcro mentioned earlier. Of course, some sort of backlit timer/counter/stopwatch would really be great, but I haven't found a good one in many years of looking. That's some of the considerations I have, was wondering what other people use. Thanks Bolo -- Josef T. Burger -- | Josef Burger U of WI-Madison Computer Sciences | "No matter where you go, | "Bolo" uwvax!bolo | There you are" | http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~bolo/ | -- Buckaroo Banzai |
#36
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Backup plates on PDA | Stan Prevost | Instrument Flight Rules | 29 | December 10th 04 02:42 AM |
Cockpit Lighting Controller | Richard | Home Built | 0 | April 8th 04 07:12 AM |
Panel lighting | Corky Scott | Home Built | 5 | March 6th 04 12:22 AM |
Good AI backup, wish me luck | Robert M. Gary | Instrument Flight Rules | 29 | March 1st 04 05:36 PM |
Solid State Backup AI | Dan Truesdell | Instrument Flight Rules | 20 | January 15th 04 09:53 PM |