Temperature of Light and White Balancing

LED Temperature

I am sure most folks when they are picking out what LED bulbs, usually buy LEDs by colour and go via marketing jargons like Warm White, Cool Day, Warm Yellow etc. These terms usually represent the output colour of your LEDs. Some of you would know that there is a standard way to represent them in terms of colour temperature with units in Kelvin(These would be mentioned on your bulbs). Let’s explore what those are today.

LED Temperature White Balancing

The temperature of colour is a weird way to represent information. Colour has no “heat”. So why use temperature as a measurement unit for it? It all goes back to a concept known as a black body radiator. In simple terms, it’s a theoretical material which emits radiation(aka light) when heated to different high temperatures. For example, think of a metal(which is a somewhat close real-life black body), when it’s heated to say 1500K has a particular glow in the red/orange range. Now when you start increasing the temperature of this material, the colour slowly starts to change white(Bluish tinge). So hence temperature Kelvin is used in relation to the colour of light. The temperature range can go from 1500K – 10,000K+. 1700K range corresponds to candle-flame-orange light & 6500K is clear sunlight on a bright day. So you have a huge range of LEDs to choose from based on what you want.

Temperature and White Balancing

Now let’s come to photography of this light. Where it’s all relative to your settings. Open your mobile camera and go to the manual mode in your camera you will see there is something known as White Balance on the settings, This is also measured in Kelvin. This setting is telling your camera sensor what pure white light is. Let’s say you put the WB setting on the camera as 5000K and take a photo of an object. So any light source in your scene with a colour temp of 5000K will appear white on your image whereas any light source lesser than that will appear Yellow and anything above will appear bluish. It’s as simple as that. Now if slide up your white balance to say 6500K setting you will see more things looking yellow (if the scene lighting is at say 5000K). Knowing this concept will help you take killer pics and set the lighting mood for your camera. Take a look at the picture for seeing how an image will come out for the same lighting scene shot with different WB settings.

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Measuring Tape Teardown

Had taken out a cheap measuring tape from my tool kit for some measurements earlier this week. These are the ones which spring back when you release them. Turns out my darn tape won’t coil back. It was stuck with the entire section hanging out. Then I thought why not, let’s open it up and see what’s happening.

Measuring Tape Teardown
Measuring Tape Teardown
Measuring Tape Teardown
Measuring Tape Teardown

Measuring tape consists of a metallic yellow/white unit with black markings(Usually high contrast colours are used for easy reading). It’s coiled all along a central hub. The magic happens in the central hub which consists of a tightly coiled spring(Guessing it’s made of some form of spring steel) which rotates in the other direction (Creating more tension) when the tape is pulled out. The length of the coil of the spring is almost the same as the measurement tape itself. When released, the spring coils back pulling the entire tape back in a snap. An elegant design which looks simple enough. Seems that in my unit, the spring steel part is broken. It’s not really worth repairing these by cutting the spring steel and reattaching, as a new one will cost you only around INR 100($1.2), but sure you can repair it if you want to, be ready to deal with unwinding a mangled tape though.

Measuring Tape Patent

When I searched the patent databases, I found the potentially first design of this tape which was filed more than 150+ years ago in 1864. Patent No. US45372A. Nice to see that a design engineered that far back is still relevant and fully functional today.

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