I installed a Lee Zircon 805 Minus Green in front of my Noctigon Meteor M43 5000K 219C and it removed the green tint and made it look almost identical to a 5000K Nichia 219B. I was bothered by the green tint, and the filter now made the light much more pleasant to use.
I’ve even put Zircon Minus Green 802 and 803 in front of my high CRI Zebralights. I enjoy using them so much more now and the loss in output is well worth the trade off.
Where’s the best place to get these minus green filters economically? Would anyone be willing to sell a segment of their sheet? I can’t see using more than like a few inches of the stuff, but everywhere I’ve checked on-line so far you have to buy a huge sheet of it (2 feet long). I checked on those filter swatch books that are offered pretty cheap, but it’s a flat rate of $7.50 for shipping and then I’d be stuck with a bunch of filters I’d never use.
yes it has the minus green, 1/8, 1/4, 1/2, 1
it also has other filters such as bastard amber 162, marlene #506, amber #775, amber #774, that someone I know mentioned using… so I liked that I could compare what they used, to what I like… I prefer 1/4 minus green… the filters are all marked with the light transmission rate, so you can know how much you are giving up in lumens…
and I have played with some green, and red filters too
I even put a green filter into a plastic bottle cap, that fits over my Novatac and HDS, so I can pop it on and off… all good fun… cheaper than a movie
just do it! LOL!
the swatches are 1.5” by about 3” of useable sample, the book is over 2” thick… there is even diffusion film
Make sure that you buy the Zircon filters if there is any chance at all that they become warm during use (usually when the lens/filter is close to the LED => smaller lights). The standard LEE filters lose their function quickly if they become warm.
at the very least, I recommend the swatch book as a way to test the filters, so xevious can experience them, before spending money on the premium Zircon ones, and so he knows which one he needs, or wants
Search for a photography/theatrical supply store inour area and ask if they stock color correcting filters.
Those big 2-foot square sheets are meant to filter theatrical or photographic lights.
There is another brand — Rosco —- you may find locally.
And ask if they have the filter “sample packs” — which are often sold inexpensively.
Those are little books with 1x1.5-inch strips of each color filter.
PS — the filter packs come out every year; I found suppliers would give me last year’s sample packs free.
Probably a stupid question, but if you can't get the bezel off, how do you attach the filter? I use dc-fix on some lights but it has adhesive and it's no problem to attach and keep it there and be able to remove it. Does these filters have a similar type of adhesive?
I’ve only used Lee filters on optics lights, since I’m able to sandwich the filter between the lens and optic. I wish I could put one on my beloved SC600 HI.
However, my ROT66 with SST20s is my favorite hiking light thanks to a lee 804 filter.
On my H600fc I put a tiny amount of glue from a glue stick around the edge between the glass and filter. It works ok but a water resistant glue might be better.
A tiny amount of contact cement around the edge of the lens. Water resistant and easy to remove with rubbing alcohol later.
On lights where the bezel is removeable I put it between the lens and bezel (or optics and lens on TIR lights).
Highly suggest the –1/4 for anyone buying filters. If a light has a high enough duv that you’ll want to lower it the 1/8 doesn’t really do enough, and the difference in total output loss between the two filter strengths is very minimal basically imperceptible.