Quite awhile ago I published an up camera light idea to github, using an angled octogon of lights panels: https://github.com/issus/Pick-And-Place-Lights
I finally got around to assembling them! I'm still waiting for the 3d printed base, it was set to run before we left work on Friday, and should have finished some time yesterday morning.
With over 2000lumens of light, it's rather bright. I'm using good CRI leds (only 80 CRI but still much better than the 40-60 you get in LED rings from aliexpress/ebay) which means I should get very good colour rendering from it, hopefully helping the vision system do it's job. There's 128x
https://www.digikey.com/product-search/en?keywords=1214-1212-2-ND in the octoring. They were the cheapest decent CRI, high lm/W leds I could find.
That panel then folds up to make the final octoring. Each panel is individually powered, able to be shut down independently, and they are all independently current limited. So the next test was to power them up with the current limiter on my powersupply set very low, then get it to just the point that the leds would be visible to see how evenly lit they are. If the LEDs are good quality they should all turn on at basically exactly the same voltage, and with exactly the same brightness.
They certainly appeared to, i'm very pleased with the matching of the LEDs!
Its very difficult to photograph how bright these are, so I put them up against my desk magnifying lamp. For comparison, it's rather painful to look at the panel of lights - but there is no discomfort at all looking at my lamp. The light from my octo creates shadows in the light from my lamp from around 10 times the distance.
I'll try them tomorrow night with the camera mounted in it to see what happens.
- Mark
