I Lowered Duv with a custom paint!

It’s not clear to me what brightness means in your context. We need a number that is integrated (in a sphere/lumen tube) as well as some number for candela measured in the hotspot outside the sphere.

Also, when you put the coating on the inside of the glass will the Carclo optic scratch it up when you really crank down the bezel?

I dont want actual lumens either. I want to know not only the overall “brightness” reduction but also the reduction in throw and how it effects the beam shape.

Doubling the strength of the spray made sense to me at first too. Except then it only takes 4 coats to achieve 1/2 -green, and that’s kind of insane and dangerous considering these lights already run at or near their thermal capacity on turbo. Plus, what I call “1-coat” is a rather thin layer, and I know less experienced painters tend to make their coats much thicker than me. And man, you can really puddle it on if your lens is laying flat.

I like negative Duv but not at 20-30% reduction in output. I also prefer less range of shift from low to turbo. If you apply a filter on SST20 for example turbo will probably be too rosy and low outputs fine

I’ take 1 can. You got me on “turbo out of it”.

Would this paintable coating be waterproof?
And more importantly, would it be removable if one decides to swap out the LED, or over coated and made it too pink?

I use Lee filters on many of my lights, but recently have been converting my multi LED lights to have mixed tints. This way, the DUV get’s lowered without needing to use a filter and lower the luminous efficiency.

The idea of paintable coating sounds like a great DIY solution over Lee Filters.

Yes, it’s waterproof. And it can be removed with some acetone, assuming your lens isn’t plastic, because acetone would destroy a plastic lens.

So I see this being excellent when paired with an SST-20, because you get the high CRI of the SST-20, without any green tint.

But if you don’t value high CRI as just want rosy, you should just use an LED that emits rosy light to begin with.

I’d check out a link if you got it.
They are vary comparable in my testing. But the 219b r9080 was dimmer, had a slightly lower CRI, and is of course discontinued so they are harder to get.

A more interesting comparison would have been at max 7135. The SST20 will probably be closer

Oh that. Nobody should ever put a 1/2 minus green filter on anything with a turbo setting. That’s like 50% of the light converted to heat.

imho the only right way to use a filter is minimally. If you get above 1/4 -green that is just an abuse of the tech and doesn’t make sense. At high correction levels like 1/2 -green, the only right thing to do is buy a different emitter that’s closer to what you need.

1x7135 = 350mA
Max 7135 = ~3A

With more current the output scales differently for each LED, 3A is far from turbo and I think the SST-20’s additional headroom will probably equal it or climb ahead at higher currents.

Just want to respond to this post real quick. IMHO, depending on how many applications you’d get per can, I’d think $15 - $20 per can might be a very reasonable price to some BLF’ers. The “average” BLF’er wouldn’t care much about a little bit of green tint anyway.

Like you say, it’s a matter of how many people care about their green tint enough to spend $15-20 to fix it.
As far as how many applications, it would be a lifetime supply for flashlights. It’s a full size can, so you could probably apply it to the windows on your car or house :stuck_out_tongue:

Gosh durn it.

Has Toykeeper even seen an FD2/FA3 SST-20?

The SST-20 is a much newer LED, and it’s to be expected that the tint bins available with good brightness bins will take quite a bit of time to actually get.

See, that’s why I think it would be a great deal for some members. Perhaps you haven’t seen the literally hundreds of lights some members have in their collection. If one could buy any flashlight that looked good to them, without having to even consider the green content of the output, it would be a boon to a lot of them. For some flashlights, there simply isn’t an emitter option that is ‘suitable’ for some people. This spray would represent a significant cost savings in both time and money compared to doing emitter swaps when green tint is the only reason for the swap. :wink:

Ah, that’s right BlueSwordM, TK has an old, extra-green bin of SST-20, and she has extra-rosy preferences…

I think this idea held up to debate quite well. So let’s start an interest list. How many flashlight enthusiasts want a can of this Green Delete? It will be $15 for an 11 oz can. Which is not bad at all considering this is a specialty paint. And one can is basically a lifetime supply.

1) likevvi
2) id30209
3) aswang

Wow. Nice work Joshk. Very rosy tints are nice but I’m good with simple no green tint. I have a few lights that are just a little bit greenish for me and don’t want to put my remaining lee minus green on them. I’d definitely be interested in this paint of yours.

Some CTO or Amber paint to lower CCT might also be useful. I think these would be nice for diffusers for candlelight effect without sacrificing your favorite normal use CCT. Not sure if regular orange paint can achieve this without sacrificing CRI.