Home > Maintenance & Modifications > Laser Headlights Next? |
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Supacat Member Since: 16 Oct 2012 Location: West Yorkshire Posts: 11018 |
be honest, you're trying to home build one of these
http://www.dailystar.co.uk/tech/429051/Loc...laser-test |
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12th Mar 2015 8:43am |
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Shax Member Since: 05 Oct 2010 Location: London Posts: 391 |
I have got to get me one of those!!! ... ,-------,
.. I [__][_]|__ .. I __ |"_|"__| .. "(o)====(o)" ^^_-^-_^-^_^^^^^--^^^^ PAUL G7ALW 14.200 USB 26FB458 / 27.275 SSB |
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12th Mar 2015 7:17pm |
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Supacat Member Since: 16 Oct 2012 Location: West Yorkshire Posts: 11018 |
http://www.carblogindia.com/mercedes-benz-...headlamps/
I found this an interesting article on what one major manufacturer is doing to improve lighting. "the MULTIBEAM headlamp set-up by incorporating 84 individual LEDs instead of the current 24. Also in the works is a ‘High Range’ LED high beam, that can light up the road up to 600 meters ahead, a system which they claim will be cheaper than BMW’s laser headlight technology." |
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30th Mar 2015 11:14am |
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Supacat Member Since: 16 Oct 2012 Location: West Yorkshire Posts: 11018 |
and moving on...
"Audi is presenting its next step in automotive lighting technology at the IAA in Frankfurt. The new Matrix OLED lights enable a previously unattainable level of lighting homogeneity, opening up further creative opportunities for design. As the leading brand in automotive lighting technology, Audi has systematically developed all aspects of OLED technology over the years. Matrix OLED lights combine hightech engineering and design ideally — initial projects are currently underway to implement OLED technology in production tail lights. They are being shown for the first time in a concept car at the IAA. OLED is an acronym for “organic light emitting diode.” In each OLED unit, two electrodes — of which at least one must be transparent — incorporate numerous thin layers of organic semiconductor materials. A low DC voltage — between three and four volts — activates the layers, each of which is less than onethousandth of a millimeter thick, to light them. The color is based on the molecular composition of the light source." http://www.arabnews.com/news/788576 |
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10th Aug 2015 8:18am |
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