Wavien RLT™ LED Kit

I’ve used old tiny Christmas bulbs a few time on dedomed xmls and as far as I’m concerned you get a nice little increase if you did a good job dedoming and didn’t take off any phosphor
I cut them off at the top where trees already a hole and just clean it up
I’ve also tried using reflectors my experience with those are that there very thick so you can’t make as clean of a cut due to melting the plastic
But the use of a drill press does sound like a winning ticket
I wish I had one

Hey Comfy,

May I ask what percentage increase in lux you typically see by doing this?

No idea, never measured it.

In this first pic the Mag reflector is centered, the reflected light is going back down onto the die...

Moved off center, you can see both the reflected spot (off the lower right corner) and also that the die is no longer washed out, you can see detail there that wasn't visible with the reflector centered. Both pics were with camera in manual mode, same settings for both, so the differences between the pics are real and not caused by the camera auto-adjusting.

which lens is used when using a collar?

This doesn't affect the lens or focal length, it just recycles some of the wasted spill and uses it to make the die brighter. Aspherics are really projectors, so if the die is brighter the projected image will be brighter as well.

Could not one use a 3D printer to print a hemispherical collar with an opening, and spray that with a high reflective coating?

Are you related in any way to marinebeam? that first post sounds a bit like commercial seller advertising…

Hey Comfychair, thanks for the Wavien hack. It’s a bit of an old forum post, I was wondering if you’re still on it.
I’m trying it out right now, ordered the same Maglite reflectors and using a cree xml2 LED. I see a slight difference in brightness. However, I have the Wavien assembled prototype version next to it and that seems still brighter.
The Wavien is more of a yellow LED and mine is blue-ish, so bit hard to tell, optically.
And there seem more slight differences, the Wavien version is more parabolic for example, I can imagine this gives a better result?

I was wondering if you ever tested the results with exactly the same LED’s with a Wavien collar compared with your setup?
I wish I could do, but the wavien collar is glued to its base, cannot easily take it off.
Also wondering if you got any further results in general?

tnx

Awesome!
Pics or it didn’t happen. :stuck_out_tongue:
(edit: in 2014 or before apparently…)

Btw, it’s a spherical mirror, not parabolic (at least, it should be).

The maglite reflector is parabolic, a wavien collar is spherical.

…and welcome to the forum, riskama, landgenoot.

Riskama,

If your beam is still blueish it means that the recycling is not occurring, or is not happening very effectively. When the light is recycled back onto the phosphor correctly, the remaining blue wavelengths are re-emitted in warmer wavelengths. thus the warmer light you see on the original Wavien prototype, even though its emitter is ~6500K (quite blue before the recycling process).

The Wavien reflector is not parabolic, but rather perfectly spherical, and so the wasted light is retro-reflected directly back to the emitter.

The asphere lens and its NA also affects the ultimate Candela output and throw, and the Wavien and Marinebeam RLT lights use a custom and expensive lens.

This is great info. Thanks Jeff! Interesting.
I’m using the prototype without lens btw.
And it’s true that with this maclite reflector positioned right it becomes just slightly more yellow, but just not enough.
Wavien stopped selling, or they’re transferring their company to another business and model atm, so beside theirs are very expensive - I now feel the need to DIY one [while I need multiple in the end]. Looking for ways though, christmas is far away still ;), but will try to find some shiny balls…

Lol he called you ClusterFux. I’m sorry, I’m having a teenage giggling moment this afternoon.

Yes, the Wavien components are expensive, but they are quite low volume, very specialized (borosilicate with specialized coatings dialed in for the specific wavelengths) and with very tight tolerances. Very difficult to manufacture the RLT correctly and consistently, and currently impossible from worldwide vendors to get an outer datum to reference accurately enough to the inner reflective sphere to make a drop together flashlight. It is then quite time-consuming to actively align to <0.1mm in 3-axes and permanently fix in place in a flashlight that must then pass the FL1 drop tests, etc.

A fun project for sure, but it might be hard to pull off economically.

I assume the wavien collar is a ‘cold reflector’, reflecting only visible light, not IR (heat basically).

Wavien has gone dark and is no longer manufacturing anything or replying to contact requests.
Other than finding collars on the used market, the only option would be to buy a custom electroformed reflector, which would be really expensive because no company has a spherical mandrel already made of that size.

Not exactly the case. Marinebeam is still an active licensee, and is still manufacturing the RLT collars for its own commercially available products. Because of licensing restrictions, however, Marinebeam will not sell the components individually at this time.

How do you know that?
It seems to me that they just bought a bunch of stuff when wavien still existed and are just reselling what they have.
Even the other wavien collar flashlight that wavien produced is no longer sold by marinebeam, probably because they ran out of stock and don’t get any new ones.

You can easily read the whole explanation on the Marinebeam website. Marinebeam was originally purchasing housings from Brinkmann, which was the same supplier Wavien had previously used for their proof of concept flashlights. But, Brinkmann went bankrupt more than two years ago, and Wavien’s backer Metro Media pulled the plug on Wavien shortly thereafter. All of the IP was sold to another entity, Meadowstar. Meadowstar was also a licensee that builds a non-lethal light weapon for the military using the Wavien RLT technology. In the meantime, Marinebeam is an active licensee, and has been designing, building, and selling two different versions of their own design using their own suppliers for the optical components. Marinebeam did not buy any surplus components from Wavien, or from Meadowstar. It did, however, buy surplus branded housings from Brinkmann (originally destined for Home Depot).