my underestanding is that you would use the LED to shine through the wall of
the vessel, and use the nature of the lighted wood to show you how thin or
uniform the wall thickness is. An LED generally has a very directional light
radiation pettern, rather than an all-around diffuse pattern like a regular
light bulb. A regular light bulb will light up the entire inside of your
vessel, like a lantern, allowing you to see which parts of the wall are
thicker than others. In contrast, a single LED will light up a single spot,
according to its radiation pattern, of say 10 or 20 degrees, or whatever. If
you want a single brightly lighted spot, a single high-intensity LED is the
ticket for you. If you want a more complete internal illumination, an LED
might not be what you seek.
LEDs are reasonably enough priced, though, that it would be a great
experiment to see what kind of results you actually get. If you have to order
just one, it is likely the cost of shipping and handling will be more than
the cost of the diode. A term that sticks in my mind, like white cat hair on
dark flannel, is "5-watt high-intensity".
respectfully,
tom koehler
--
I will find a way or make one.
Yes, that is my idea to use the light source to see how thin and
uniform my wall was. I was not aware that LED's were directional.
Never the less, they are small and bright for their size which is
crutial in this application. I guess that I will have to do the semi-
final inspections by withdrawing the boreing bar and inserting a
conventuial high intensity bulb to look for high spots. I doubt that
I will have all the parts assembled before Xmass. I'll post a comment
on how it works when I get it up and running.
Paul Gilbert
Russ
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