Silverstar 9006XS/ST lowbeams vs standard Halogens
#21
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Silverstar 9006XS/ST lowbeams vs standard Halogens
out of interest, how do you get a colour temperature of a match flame
at 1900K when wood burns at less than 500K ?
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
> "Lee Ayrton" <layrton@panix.com> wrote in message
> news:Pine.NEB.4.61.0411261312290.11333@panix3.pani x.com...
> For comparison, the color temperature of a match flame is about 1900
> degrees Kelvin (1900K), a household light bulb is 3200K, late afternoon
> sunlight is about 4500K, a blue glass photoflood bulb is 4800K, an
> overcast sky is 7000K and light coming from only blue sky is 10,000 to
> 20,000K.
at 1900K when wood burns at less than 500K ?
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
> "Lee Ayrton" <layrton@panix.com> wrote in message
> news:Pine.NEB.4.61.0411261312290.11333@panix3.pani x.com...
> For comparison, the color temperature of a match flame is about 1900
> degrees Kelvin (1900K), a household light bulb is 3200K, late afternoon
> sunlight is about 4500K, a blue glass photoflood bulb is 4800K, an
> overcast sky is 7000K and light coming from only blue sky is 10,000 to
> 20,000K.
#22
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Silverstar 9006XS/ST lowbeams vs standard Halogens
out of interest, how do you get a colour temperature of a match flame
at 1900K when wood burns at less than 500K ?
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
> "Lee Ayrton" <layrton@panix.com> wrote in message
> news:Pine.NEB.4.61.0411261312290.11333@panix3.pani x.com...
> For comparison, the color temperature of a match flame is about 1900
> degrees Kelvin (1900K), a household light bulb is 3200K, late afternoon
> sunlight is about 4500K, a blue glass photoflood bulb is 4800K, an
> overcast sky is 7000K and light coming from only blue sky is 10,000 to
> 20,000K.
at 1900K when wood burns at less than 500K ?
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
> "Lee Ayrton" <layrton@panix.com> wrote in message
> news:Pine.NEB.4.61.0411261312290.11333@panix3.pani x.com...
> For comparison, the color temperature of a match flame is about 1900
> degrees Kelvin (1900K), a household light bulb is 3200K, late afternoon
> sunlight is about 4500K, a blue glass photoflood bulb is 4800K, an
> overcast sky is 7000K and light coming from only blue sky is 10,000 to
> 20,000K.
#23
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Silverstar 9006XS/ST lowbeams vs standard Halogens
Good question. I dunno. I'm a lighting guy, not a combustion guy and I
do my best to not let people light with firewood in favor of a nice,
controlled tungsten light, a flicker box and some colored gels. My SWAG
would be that it has to do with thermal mass, the unburned firewood
holding the temperature down, but that's just a SWAG.
On Sat, 27 Nov 2004, Dave Milne wrote:
> out of interest, how do you get a colour temperature of a match flame
> at 1900K when wood burns at less than 500K ?
>
> Dave Milne, Scotland
> '91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
>
> > "Lee Ayrton" <layrton@panix.com> wrote in message
>> news:Pine.NEB.4.61.0411261312290.11333@panix3.pani x.com...
>> For comparison, the color temperature of a match flame is about 1900
>> degrees Kelvin (1900K), a household light bulb is 3200K, late afternoon
>> sunlight is about 4500K, a blue glass photoflood bulb is 4800K, an
>> overcast sky is 7000K and light coming from only blue sky is 10,000 to
>> 20,000K.
>
>
>
--
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#24
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Silverstar 9006XS/ST lowbeams vs standard Halogens
Good question. I dunno. I'm a lighting guy, not a combustion guy and I
do my best to not let people light with firewood in favor of a nice,
controlled tungsten light, a flicker box and some colored gels. My SWAG
would be that it has to do with thermal mass, the unburned firewood
holding the temperature down, but that's just a SWAG.
On Sat, 27 Nov 2004, Dave Milne wrote:
> out of interest, how do you get a colour temperature of a match flame
> at 1900K when wood burns at less than 500K ?
>
> Dave Milne, Scotland
> '91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
>
> > "Lee Ayrton" <layrton@panix.com> wrote in message
>> news:Pine.NEB.4.61.0411261312290.11333@panix3.pani x.com...
>> For comparison, the color temperature of a match flame is about 1900
>> degrees Kelvin (1900K), a household light bulb is 3200K, late afternoon
>> sunlight is about 4500K, a blue glass photoflood bulb is 4800K, an
>> overcast sky is 7000K and light coming from only blue sky is 10,000 to
>> 20,000K.
>
>
>
--
Some conditions apply. YMMV. This message was packed by weight, not
by volume. TWIAVBP, local variation may occur. Dramatization, not a real
authority. Do not induce vomiting. No user-serviceable words inside.
#25
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Silverstar 9006XS/ST lowbeams vs standard Halogens
Good question. I dunno. I'm a lighting guy, not a combustion guy and I
do my best to not let people light with firewood in favor of a nice,
controlled tungsten light, a flicker box and some colored gels. My SWAG
would be that it has to do with thermal mass, the unburned firewood
holding the temperature down, but that's just a SWAG.
On Sat, 27 Nov 2004, Dave Milne wrote:
> out of interest, how do you get a colour temperature of a match flame
> at 1900K when wood burns at less than 500K ?
>
> Dave Milne, Scotland
> '91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
>
> > "Lee Ayrton" <layrton@panix.com> wrote in message
>> news:Pine.NEB.4.61.0411261312290.11333@panix3.pani x.com...
>> For comparison, the color temperature of a match flame is about 1900
>> degrees Kelvin (1900K), a household light bulb is 3200K, late afternoon
>> sunlight is about 4500K, a blue glass photoflood bulb is 4800K, an
>> overcast sky is 7000K and light coming from only blue sky is 10,000 to
>> 20,000K.
>
>
>
--
Some conditions apply. YMMV. This message was packed by weight, not
by volume. TWIAVBP, local variation may occur. Dramatization, not a real
authority. Do not induce vomiting. No user-serviceable words inside.
#26
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Silverstar 9006XS/ST lowbeams vs standard Halogens
The match, like wood, gives off combustible gases when heated above
some mumble mumble [451 F] degrees. However that doesn't mean that
the match flame is 1900 Kelvin, it just means it is roughly the
same color as a blackbody radiator heated to 1900 K.
Dave Milne proclaimed:
> out of interest, how do you get a colour temperature of a match flame
> at 1900K when wood burns at less than 500K ?
>
> Dave Milne, Scotland
> '91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
>
> > "Lee Ayrton" <layrton@panix.com> wrote in message
>
>>news:Pine.NEB.4.61.0411261312290.11333@panix3.pa nix.com...
>>For comparison, the color temperature of a match flame is about 1900
>>degrees Kelvin (1900K), a household light bulb is 3200K, late afternoon
>>sunlight is about 4500K, a blue glass photoflood bulb is 4800K, an
>>overcast sky is 7000K and light coming from only blue sky is 10,000 to
>>20,000K.
some mumble mumble [451 F] degrees. However that doesn't mean that
the match flame is 1900 Kelvin, it just means it is roughly the
same color as a blackbody radiator heated to 1900 K.
Dave Milne proclaimed:
> out of interest, how do you get a colour temperature of a match flame
> at 1900K when wood burns at less than 500K ?
>
> Dave Milne, Scotland
> '91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
>
> > "Lee Ayrton" <layrton@panix.com> wrote in message
>
>>news:Pine.NEB.4.61.0411261312290.11333@panix3.pa nix.com...
>>For comparison, the color temperature of a match flame is about 1900
>>degrees Kelvin (1900K), a household light bulb is 3200K, late afternoon
>>sunlight is about 4500K, a blue glass photoflood bulb is 4800K, an
>>overcast sky is 7000K and light coming from only blue sky is 10,000 to
>>20,000K.
#27
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Silverstar 9006XS/ST lowbeams vs standard Halogens
The match, like wood, gives off combustible gases when heated above
some mumble mumble [451 F] degrees. However that doesn't mean that
the match flame is 1900 Kelvin, it just means it is roughly the
same color as a blackbody radiator heated to 1900 K.
Dave Milne proclaimed:
> out of interest, how do you get a colour temperature of a match flame
> at 1900K when wood burns at less than 500K ?
>
> Dave Milne, Scotland
> '91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
>
> > "Lee Ayrton" <layrton@panix.com> wrote in message
>
>>news:Pine.NEB.4.61.0411261312290.11333@panix3.pa nix.com...
>>For comparison, the color temperature of a match flame is about 1900
>>degrees Kelvin (1900K), a household light bulb is 3200K, late afternoon
>>sunlight is about 4500K, a blue glass photoflood bulb is 4800K, an
>>overcast sky is 7000K and light coming from only blue sky is 10,000 to
>>20,000K.
some mumble mumble [451 F] degrees. However that doesn't mean that
the match flame is 1900 Kelvin, it just means it is roughly the
same color as a blackbody radiator heated to 1900 K.
Dave Milne proclaimed:
> out of interest, how do you get a colour temperature of a match flame
> at 1900K when wood burns at less than 500K ?
>
> Dave Milne, Scotland
> '91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
>
> > "Lee Ayrton" <layrton@panix.com> wrote in message
>
>>news:Pine.NEB.4.61.0411261312290.11333@panix3.pa nix.com...
>>For comparison, the color temperature of a match flame is about 1900
>>degrees Kelvin (1900K), a household light bulb is 3200K, late afternoon
>>sunlight is about 4500K, a blue glass photoflood bulb is 4800K, an
>>overcast sky is 7000K and light coming from only blue sky is 10,000 to
>>20,000K.
#28
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Silverstar 9006XS/ST lowbeams vs standard Halogens
The match, like wood, gives off combustible gases when heated above
some mumble mumble [451 F] degrees. However that doesn't mean that
the match flame is 1900 Kelvin, it just means it is roughly the
same color as a blackbody radiator heated to 1900 K.
Dave Milne proclaimed:
> out of interest, how do you get a colour temperature of a match flame
> at 1900K when wood burns at less than 500K ?
>
> Dave Milne, Scotland
> '91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
>
> > "Lee Ayrton" <layrton@panix.com> wrote in message
>
>>news:Pine.NEB.4.61.0411261312290.11333@panix3.pa nix.com...
>>For comparison, the color temperature of a match flame is about 1900
>>degrees Kelvin (1900K), a household light bulb is 3200K, late afternoon
>>sunlight is about 4500K, a blue glass photoflood bulb is 4800K, an
>>overcast sky is 7000K and light coming from only blue sky is 10,000 to
>>20,000K.
some mumble mumble [451 F] degrees. However that doesn't mean that
the match flame is 1900 Kelvin, it just means it is roughly the
same color as a blackbody radiator heated to 1900 K.
Dave Milne proclaimed:
> out of interest, how do you get a colour temperature of a match flame
> at 1900K when wood burns at less than 500K ?
>
> Dave Milne, Scotland
> '91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
>
> > "Lee Ayrton" <layrton@panix.com> wrote in message
>
>>news:Pine.NEB.4.61.0411261312290.11333@panix3.pa nix.com...
>>For comparison, the color temperature of a match flame is about 1900
>>degrees Kelvin (1900K), a household light bulb is 3200K, late afternoon
>>sunlight is about 4500K, a blue glass photoflood bulb is 4800K, an
>>overcast sky is 7000K and light coming from only blue sky is 10,000 to
>>20,000K.
#29
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Silverstar 9006XS/ST lowbeams vs standard Halogens
Gotcha.
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"Lon" <lon.stowell@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:2o9qd.677510$8_6.620072@attbi_s04...
> The match, like wood, gives off combustible gases when heated above
> some mumble mumble [451 F] degrees. However that doesn't mean that
> the match flame is 1900 Kelvin, it just means it is roughly the
> same color as a blackbody radiator heated to 1900 K.
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"Lon" <lon.stowell@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:2o9qd.677510$8_6.620072@attbi_s04...
> The match, like wood, gives off combustible gases when heated above
> some mumble mumble [451 F] degrees. However that doesn't mean that
> the match flame is 1900 Kelvin, it just means it is roughly the
> same color as a blackbody radiator heated to 1900 K.
#30
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Silverstar 9006XS/ST lowbeams vs standard Halogens
Gotcha.
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"Lon" <lon.stowell@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:2o9qd.677510$8_6.620072@attbi_s04...
> The match, like wood, gives off combustible gases when heated above
> some mumble mumble [451 F] degrees. However that doesn't mean that
> the match flame is 1900 Kelvin, it just means it is roughly the
> same color as a blackbody radiator heated to 1900 K.
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"Lon" <lon.stowell@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:2o9qd.677510$8_6.620072@attbi_s04...
> The match, like wood, gives off combustible gases when heated above
> some mumble mumble [451 F] degrees. However that doesn't mean that
> the match flame is 1900 Kelvin, it just means it is roughly the
> same color as a blackbody radiator heated to 1900 K.