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Homemade sky beamer
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I've always been fascinated by Philips's UHP lamps. Those operate under truly mind-boggling conditions and have superlative characteristics. It was my good fortune to have worked on some aspects of the technology at a time when the company pushed the boundaries towards brighter and more powerful sources. Naturally, I got my hands on a few of those lamps (and their electronic ballasts) and I played quite a bit with that technology, resulting in the scene depicted in the photo above, among other things. It is a key characteristic of UHP lamps to have a near point-like source of light of extreme brightness, which enables the projection of a very narrow beam of light when used in conjunction with a parabolic mirror. In the case shown here, the projector is fitted with a small 200 W lamp, which is surprisingly effective in this sky beaming application.
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Sammi - You should see it in operation during foggy weather or during a snowstorm, it's really magnificent!
Tuopeek - Interesting. I am certainly mistaken, but I don't recall overhead projectors using any collimating optics. How did you manage to get a tight light beam? Was your lamp a tungsten-halogen one or was it a more powerful type using an HID source?
Looking at this also reminds me of 9/11, and the twin beams of light that lit up the lower Manhattan sky from the WTC site.
Where was the power supply drawn from..? Surely not straight from the local grid..?
Ria - Diesel generators are used to feed the whole installation. I don't think the local mains could take nearly a Megawatt of extra power consumption...