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    Render this: L.E.D lighting

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    • N Offline
      notareal
      last edited by

      A slight issue. All LEDs I seen, do have a solid epoxy enclosure.

      Welcome to try [Thea Render](http://www.thearender.com/), Thea support | [kerkythea.net](http://www.kerkythea.net/) -team member

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      • soloS Offline
        solo
        last edited by

        Or like a rope light enclosure.

        http://www.solos-art.com

        If you see a toilet in your dreams do not use it.

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        • N Offline
          notareal
          last edited by

          Did mean how a single led is made...

          http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/f9/LED%2C_5mm%2C_green_(en).svg/300px-LED%2C_5mm%2C_green_(en).svg.png

          There are naturally plenty of different packages, but encapsulation is always solid.

          Welcome to try [Thea Render](http://www.thearender.com/), Thea support | [kerkythea.net](http://www.kerkythea.net/) -team member

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          • ely862meE Offline
            ely862me
            last edited by

            1st try Hypershot
            emitter on the inside cube, colored tinted glass on the led and thin glass film on the outer glass.


            LEDs.jpg

            Elisei (sketchupper)


            Before no life was done on Earth it was THE LIFE ITSELF...GOD
            Come and See EliseiDesign

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            • soloS Offline
              solo
              last edited by

              I see what you are referring to, I assumed you meant the casing for the strip.

              If you would like I can remove the inner part of the dome, or you can as they are componented if that will help with the render.

              http://www.solos-art.com

              If you see a toilet in your dreams do not use it.

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              • soloS Offline
                solo
                last edited by

                Here is another version without inner bits to the LED's.

                LED3 strip.skp

                And here is a shorter version with a center core, so there are many options, feel free to modify as you feel necessary as this is not an absolute model but just a guideline to start from.

                LED4 strip.skp

                http://www.solos-art.com

                If you see a toilet in your dreams do not use it.

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                • soloS Offline
                  solo
                  last edited by

                  I did, see LED4 above.

                  http://www.solos-art.com

                  If you see a toilet in your dreams do not use it.

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                  • C Offline
                    Chris_at_Twilight
                    last edited by

                    I have a bunch of LEDs in front of me from a Christmas toy I tore apart. It looks like the curve of the acrylic is positioned just right to focus on the emitter, just like a lens. I suspect that distance is important. (Anyone know the IOR of the acrylic? 1.49 is a common acrylic number)

                    http://www.TwilightRender.com

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                    • N Offline
                      notareal
                      last edited by

                      There are so meny different materials used so it's safe to use IOR 1.40 to 1.60.

                      Welcome to try [Thea Render](http://www.thearender.com/), Thea support | [kerkythea.net](http://www.kerkythea.net/) -team member

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                      • soloS Offline
                        solo
                        last edited by

                        I'm using 1.45, the problem is the cover as having a plastic cover above an acrylic texture slows things down somewhat.
                        Not an easy challenge.

                        http://www.solos-art.com

                        If you see a toilet in your dreams do not use it.

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                        • R Offline
                          remon_v
                          last edited by

                          quick try

                          http://i22.photobucket.com/albums/b336/remon_v/LED1.jpg

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                          • soloS Offline
                            solo
                            last edited by

                            First attempt.


                            led3.jpg

                            http://www.solos-art.com

                            If you see a toilet in your dreams do not use it.

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                            • R Offline
                              remus
                              last edited by

                              Excuse the dodgy kerning.


                              i_heart_indigo2.png

                              http://remusrendering.wordpress.com/

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                              • E Offline
                                Ecuadorian
                                last edited by

                                Cool reference photo. It would be even cooler to have a LED model like this one (wink, wink).
                                http://www.otherthings.com/blog/images/led_throwies_small.jpg

                                -Miguel Lescano
                                Subscribe to my house plans YouTube channel! (30K+ subs)

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                                • Al HartA Offline
                                  Al Hart
                                  last edited by

                                  @unknownuser said:

                                  You could shorten it a bit...it's a bit awkward to throw around. šŸ˜„

                                  I took Solo's LED light strip and made a Dynamic component out of it.

                                  If you stretch it the number of lights will change to match the new length.

                                  Also, you can right click and change the light spacing or length if you have dynamic components enabled:

                                  http://forums.sketchucation.com/download/file.php?id=37377

                                  The DC is inside the .SKP file, so you could copy and paste the entire component if you wanted to use it in a different model.


                                  LED Light case.skp

                                  Al Hart

                                  http:wiki.renderplus.comimageseefRender_plus_colored30x30%29.PNG
                                  IRender nXt from Render Plus

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                                  • E Offline
                                    Ecuadorian
                                    last edited by

                                    Ok, here's my try with Twilight:

                                    I used a very, very darkened HDR as background so the light coming from the LEDs would be the focus of the image. This caused the problem I had already foreseen because I've experienced it many times when taking real photos: If you lower the exposure until you see clearly the shape of the LEDs, the rest of the scene is too dark:

                                    Exposure = 1

                                    And if you rise the exposure until the rest of the scene looks better, the LEDs themselves become overexposed.

                                    Exposure = 2

                                    Of course, I could have used a brigther HDR background from the very start (Duh!), but I want to make a point here, so please bear with me.

                                    I saved the render as an HDR and opened it in the free program Picturenaut, which is a very handy tonemapper, HDR creator, HDR<->EXR converter, etc. I used a "photoreceptor" type tonemapping with these settings:
                                    PictureNaut settings.jpg

                                    And here's the result:
                                    Tonemapped with PictureNaut.jpg
                                    I could have chosen a higher saturation level but I like how it looks.

                                    So, which one do you prefer?

                                    -Miguel Lescano
                                    Subscribe to my house plans YouTube channel! (30K+ subs)

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                                    • C Offline
                                      Chris_at_Twilight
                                      last edited by

                                      Your second image looks most realistic to me... LEDs are often overexposed in photos.
                                      By the way, what kind of material did you use? The LEDs themselves look really good.

                                      http://www.TwilightRender.com

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                                      • E Offline
                                        Ecuadorian
                                        last edited by

                                        Well, in the reference picture I linked to I noticed that LED light comes from:

                                        • A small disc inside the casing, which seems to be the source.
                                        • Total internal reflection.
                                        • Sub-Surface Scattering.

                                        So I used the SSS Rubber Ball template (which by default has IOR = 1.4, which seemed adequate after reading the first posts here), made it completely clear with no color, and rendered it with simple MLT (aka "Easy 09"). Perhaps I could have gotten better results with Bi-directional MLT (Easy 10).

                                        -Miguel Lescano
                                        Subscribe to my house plans YouTube channel! (30K+ subs)

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                                        • thomthomT Offline
                                          thomthom
                                          last edited by

                                          @ecuadorian said:

                                          Cool reference photo. It would be even cooler to have a LED model like this one (wink, wink).
                                          http://www.otherthings.com/blog/images/led_throwies_small.jpg

                                          Nice reference photo.
                                          I had a bunch of LED's next to me when I was trying this out earlier. Kept hot-wiring them to a battery until they got hot.

                                          Thomas Thomassen — SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
                                          List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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                                          • E Offline
                                            Ecuadorian
                                            last edited by

                                            Closer observation of LEDs reveals that only a part of the plastic is actually lit, so here's an update.
                                            closeup4.jpg
                                            In reality, the lit part starts with a conical shape; I'll try that tomorrow.

                                            -Miguel Lescano
                                            Subscribe to my house plans YouTube channel! (30K+ subs)

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