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    Exact effect of a 40 watt fluorescent light

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    • andybotA Offline
      andybot
      last edited by

      @valerostudio said:

      Guess I never thought of that, you could grab and IES file for a tubular light. Andybot, if you have one, can you share with the class πŸ˜„ ?

      Well, that's just the issue - ies as it is currently implemented in vray is a point source. The ies profile would have to be "stretched" along the length of the tube for it to represent a fluorescent bulb. You can only get sharp shadows from an ies source currently.

      http://charlottesvillearchitecturalrendering.com/

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      • R Offline
        rspierenburg
        last edited by

        So with the model shown above, what effect would you get if you completely incased the tube in 6 rectangular lights? Sort of a Cubic light if you will.

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        • andybotA Offline
          andybot
          last edited by

          I played around with simple rectangular lights, here are some results. You can see the light pattern is different depending on how many facets you make with the rectangular lights. It ends up with a bit of a hotspot on the ceiling using 5 planes, I actually think the 3 planes turned out better. The thing I made different from what valerostudio showed above is that I made the rectangular lights much larger than the bulb in order to get a softer more spread out effect. I have the lights set as hidden in vray.


          vray2_6d5_03.jpg


          vray2_6d_test4.jpg

          http://charlottesvillearchitecturalrendering.com/

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          • V Offline
            valerostudio
            last edited by

            Andybot, nice work. The thing that we need to disclaim here is that nothing we are showing you is the "exact" effect of a 40w bulb. I am fairly certain this cannot be done in Vray, unless I am wrong. You can give an light a Watts setting, but I dont think this is directly related to how a real bulb works. Someone correct me if I am wrong here.

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            • andybotA Offline
              andybot
              last edited by

              @valerostudio said:

              Andybot, nice work. The thing that we need to disclaim here is that nothing we are showing you is the "exact" effect of a 40w bulb. I am fairly certain this cannot be done in Vray, unless I am wrong. You can give an light a Watts setting, but I dont think this is directly related to how a real bulb works. Someone correct me if I am wrong here.

              Thanks!
              Correct, this is all approximate and relative. With IES files, there is actually a relationship to real values, but even then, the render engine uses an approximation (biased)

              http://charlottesvillearchitecturalrendering.com/

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              • pilouP Offline
                pilou
                last edited by

                There is not a tool for that in Light Up ?

                Frenchy Pilou
                Is beautiful that please without concept!
                My Little site :)

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                • V Offline
                  valerostudio
                  last edited by

                  I have no experience with Light-Up but I think only an unbiased rendering engine will give you "real" world results.

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                  • N Offline
                    nomeradona
                    last edited by

                    if its using wattage then biased render cant replicate that.

                    visit my blog: http://www.nomeradona.blogspot.com

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                    • N Offline
                      nomeradona
                      last edited by

                      andy that is cool tests.

                      visit my blog: http://www.nomeradona.blogspot.com

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                      • john2J Offline
                        john2
                        last edited by

                        what is biased rendering and unbiased rendering??..and andybot. awesome effect. πŸ‘

                        Sketchup Make 2017 (64-bit), Vray 4.0 , Windows 10 – 64 bit, corei7-8750H, 16GB RAM, Nvidia GeForce GTX 1050Ti 4GB

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                        • V Offline
                          valerostudio
                          last edited by

                          I think this article has the basic answers to this question.
                          http://galaxycityradio.com/2012/01/04/biased-vs-unbiased/

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