Any comments or experiences with the LED tying lights that are now on the market?
Worth the prices?
Accurate color?
Brightness?
ETC,
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Any comments or experiences with the LED tying lights that are now on the market?
Worth the prices?
Accurate color?
Brightness?
ETC,
I've been tying for a good many years and finally settled on an LED setup that is worth it's weight in gold or anything else and definitely worth the price paid.
The lights give fairly accurate color renditions and I use them for most of my fly photography that goes in the magazines. I'm sold.
I own this one: https://www.intheriffle.com/store/Dual-LED-Pro-Fly-Tying-Light.html
My wife used to borrow my Ott light all the time for sewing and leave me with just my clamp-on incandescents, then she purchased an LED lamp and my Ott no longer gets "feet". Glad to have it back but I may have to reciprocate and take hers for a test tie.
Regards,
Scott
aww man...I was hoping to hear about miniaturized lights I could tie on for low light dry fly fishing or for streamers....
I had a fluorescent lamp that also got borrowed...and then broken.
This thread got me to start thinking about an LED lamp. I did some searching around. It seems that the lights built specifically for fly tying are pretty expensive.
I saw some cheaper table LED lamps but either there are no specs for light output or the output seems low.
Many of the more inexpensive LED lamps I saw use a 3W LED. It seems that roughs out to a few hundred lumens. I use reading glasses when working close and I like more than enough light.
I may consider building my own LED lamp. LED's and DC power supplies are cheap nowadays. It should be easy enough and cheap enough to build a lamp that is much brighter than what's normally commercially available.
You might look on Ebay. I did a search under LED table lamps and found several thousand listed for sale, many of which were quite inexpensive. I just looked at a few of them and saw some that showed the number of lumens. I would think you'd want a warm versus a bright white light for fly tying, but I'm not sure of that.
I recently bought a 4' long LED light bar, with a remote control on off switch with a dimmer from an Ebay seller, to backlight a stained glass window, and I couldn't be more pleased with it.
Good Morning,
I have two lamps on my tying desk. One is a clamp on incandescent light which shines directly on the vise area and I also bought an LED desklamp which supplements the light on my desk. It was not terribly expensive and adds enough light to help my aging eyes and enables me to tie flies which I love to do. It is not placed directly in the tying area but off to the side and does a good job of just adding some additional light to the area. I have no idea how many lumens it provides but it does not seem to be skewing color selection or choices affecting the flies. I know this is not providing the answers you are looking for,but I have had the lamp for over a year,have had no problem with it and I don't have to worry about having extra bulbs in case it burns out. Best of all, it was cheap enough that I don't care about throwing it out if it doesn't work.
I have been using ott lites for years, but now i am redoing my workspace. I acquired 2 old architect lamps ( the flexible spring arm type). My solution to go led is to buy a 90watt equivalent or larger flood bulb. These are dimmable and gave life ratings of 20000-50000 hours. Stay away from the cree or lower end types. Get the daylight version and you are in business for the rest of your life. Plenty of light and if its too bright you can get a plug in dimmer.
Wasatch Custom Angling sells a really nice LED lamp, I was thinking of buying two of them as I like lots of light from several directions.
http://flytyingtools.com/vises/vises...ying-lamp.html
In fact, right now their website shows a sale price of $10 off.
http://flytyingtools.com/vises.html?p=2
Larry ---sagefisher---
Those lights are basically identical to the ones ikea sells. I had considered one but they really dont give off enough
quality light.