Thingiverse
Tritium Light
par LightningPhil
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A light that never turns off and can be used to read a book at night fueled by radioactive decay - once eyes have adjusted to the dark for a while.
A single tritium light is not really bright enough to see with. So to step things up, 5 were used. Two are green as they seem to be the brightest and 3 white - to make it a bit more pleasant to see by. Then a parabolic reflector was placed around each one to focus the light from a 360 ° spread to something like a 90 ° splodge.
In theory, this could give an apparent brightness of 20 times that of a single tritium vial without a reflector. No idea if that was achieved, but certainly much, much brighter.
To assemble:
1) Print bits
2) Use aluminium tape to make reflector (fussing about a bit to keep it neat)
3) Insert tritium vials (which should be a loose fit) and glue together
4) Find some clear plastic and cut to size for the window - if careful, it'll stay in without glue
Safety note - do not break tritium vials.
The
A single tritium light is not really bright enough to see with. So to step things up, 5 were used. Two are green as they seem to be the brightest and 3 white - to make it a bit more pleasant to see by. Then a parabolic reflector was placed around each one to focus the light from a 360 ° spread to something like a 90 ° splodge.
In theory, this could give an apparent brightness of 20 times that of a single tritium vial without a reflector. No idea if that was achieved, but certainly much, much brighter.
To assemble:
1) Print bits
2) Use aluminium tape to make reflector (fussing about a bit to keep it neat)
3) Insert tritium vials (which should be a loose fit) and glue together
4) Find some clear plastic and cut to size for the window - if careful, it'll stay in without glue
Safety note - do not break tritium vials.
The
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