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Author
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Topic: Judging reflector quality
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Michael Schaffer
"Where is the Boardwalk Hotel?"
Posts: 4143
From: Boston, MA
Registered: Apr 2002
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posted 04-20-2007 07:17 PM
What's the best way to judge the state of quality an older reflector is in visually? A lot of reflectors which have been in use a umber of years have quite a bit of dust on them as theater people rarely seem to clean them when changing the lamp.
Often, when you clean them off carefully with a soft cloth, you get rid of most of that but find a layer of dust has been baked into the reflector. Obviously, there is no way to get that off without damaging the reflective coating itself. Sometimes you find they did actually clean the reflector, and then you often have smears from lens cleaner or whatever was used and scratches. I don't really see a point in cleaning a reflector with anything but a soft cloth anyway. Typically, there are no (or shouldn't be at leasy) any smears or fingerprints on them as you often find on lenses, or other exposed optical surfaces such as sound optics which often have some goo from oil and film shedding on them.
And then of course the coating gets hazy over the years, especially when the lamphouse is too hot.
When you look at the reflector, how do you look at it to establish in what state it is? They do look very different depending on from what angle and distance you look at them, and what color and quality your light source has. I usually look at the surface from a close distance to see if there is any dust baked into it, and that is of course easy to see. But the overall reflective or "shine" of the reflector isn't easy to judge. Do you have any "tricks" for that?
BTW, what were the recommended and maximum operating temperatures for xenon lamps again? I mean the temperature of the metal end pieces just after the lamp hase been switched off. I had those figures noted down somewhere, but can't find the file right now.
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