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Anonymous Poster

LUX calculation

11/21/2008 11:15 PM

Dear Sir

Please send the Lux Calculation Procedures for particular room dimensions.

Regards

SSOORIA

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#1

Re: LUX calculation

11/21/2008 11:20 PM

Hello Guest,

I emailed the Lux Calculation Procedures for particular room dimensions directly to you last week.

Kind Regards....

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#2

Re: LUX calculation

11/22/2008 1:45 AM

Hello Guest

Some of these site offer calculator to work out the lux. Others show Formulae. Hope you find what you are looking for. Please forgive any duplication if other posts have the same sites. I have not read any of the thread yet. http://www.ndlight.com.au/lighting_calculations.htm


http://www.voltimum.co.uk/find/page-11-10-2/collec-vltsearch/how-to-calculate-the-lux-level.html


http://www.lightsearch.com/resources/lightguides/formulas.html


http://www.flg.co.uk/data_lighting_design_request/data_lighting_design_req.html


This site has a calculator to work out the Lux www.flg.co.uk/data_lighting_design_request/data_lighting_design_req.html


www.lightsearch.com/resources/lightguides/formulas.html


Good luck............

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#3
In reply to #2

Re: LUX calculation

11/22/2008 1:55 PM

Hello babybear

from me

Kind Regards....

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#4
In reply to #3

Re: LUX calculation

11/22/2008 5:16 PM

Hello Spary,

How you doing? Are you saying hello?.......I mean, as you pointed out it was barely a week ago this same question was asked?

Take care...............

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#5
In reply to #3

Re: LUX calculation

11/22/2008 5:26 PM

Hello sparky,

do you know the OP? I do not recognise the name.

Odd how similar questions come up in groups of two or trees init?

Did you give the GA? If so you are a gent Sir! If you didn't give it,.......why not!

Take care

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#6
In reply to #5

Re: LUX calculation

11/22/2008 6:26 PM

Hello babybear

The reason I gave my earlier answer is because the Original Poster had not bothered to Register at , not bothered to look for the answer using an Internet Search Engine, nor used the "Search all of CR4" facility.

Many of these "Guest" Questions are either Homework questions, or some person who cannot bother to look for the information, and want someone else to do the work for them.

I gave you the above because you did the research.

Kind Regards....

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#7
In reply to #6

Re: LUX calculation

11/22/2008 8:48 PM

Hello Sparky,

Really appreciate what you did and your opinions , when people are just too lazy to search. On the last 8 things I have researched I have taken part of the original question and, after using the grey matter a little, have found the answers.

The thing is, I can only search for things which they ask for. After all, they know what they want and what sort of detail they are after, so why not type what is sent here at CR4, into Google. If that gets no results, or the wrong type, then search for an engine which may specialise in a much more narrow search than choosing google. Last week I searched for three days before I found what I knew intuitively was out there.

I cannot understand why kids search here for the answer they need. They need to go through the process of research over and over again in necessary, which is also part of the learning process, (and what I do everyday!) to find and actually learn. As I write at the foot of my posts,

Hear and you forget; see and you remember; do and you understand.

I wonder what these kids will do when they are at work and need to do searches somewhere to find out info that could make or brake a situation?

The attitude I had as a Manager was, just imagine there WAS no one else to ask! If nothing else it made me resourceful. Whatever has to be done, I had to figure out the way. The 'Boss' will not always be there, and will expect them (the kids) to take a little pressure from time to time.

Sorry, on another rant again!!!!!

Thanks for the explanation, re 'thumbs up'. I can be a bit dim at certain times of the day!

Take care...............

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#8

Re: LUX calculation

11/25/2008 1:55 AM

There are lux meters which are quite cheap. take one to read directly lux at different locations.

you could also use software "dilux" of DOE

som derashri

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#9

Re: LUX calculation

07/31/2009 7:12 PM

Hello Guest,

=

Here is a LUX level list to help you get some idea between the different levels.

Explanation

Lux is a derived unit based on lumen, and lumen is a derived unit based on candela.

One lux is equal to one lumen per square metre, where 4π lumens is the total luminous flux of a light source of one candela of luminous intensity:

1 lx = 1 lm·m-2 = 1 cd·sr·m–2.

As with other SI units, SI prefixes can be used, for example a kilolux (klx) is 1,000 lux.

Illuminance Example

10-5 lux Light from Sirius, the brightest star in the night sky[2]

10-4 lux Total starlight, overcast sky[2]

0.002 lux Moonless clear night sky with airglow[2]

0.01 lux Quarter moon

0.2 lux Design minimum for emergency lighting (AS2293).

0.27 lux Full moon on a clear night[2][3]

1 lux Full moon overhead at tropical latitudes[4]

3.4 lux Dark limit of civil twilight under a clear sky[5]

50 lux Family living room[6]

80 lux Hallway/toilet[7]

100 lux Very dark overcast day[2]

320 lux Recommended office lighting (Australia)[8]

400 lux Sunrise or sunset on a clear day. Well-lit office area.

500 lux Lighting level for an office according to the European law UNI EN12464.

1,000 lux Overcast day[2]; typical TV studio lighting 10,000–25,000 lux Full daylight (not direct sun)[2]

32,000–130,000 lux Direct sunlight Unicode has a symbol for "lx": (㏓), but this is just a legacy code to accommodate old code pages in certain Asian languages, and it is not recommended for use in any language today.

Lux versus lumen

The difference between the lux and the lumen is that the lux takes into account the area over which the luminous flux is spread. A flux of 1,000 lumens, concentrated into an area of one square metre, lights up that square metre with an illuminance of 1,000 lux. However, the same 1,000 lumens, spread out over ten square metres, produces a dimmer illuminance of only 100 lux.

Achieving an illuminance of 500 lux might be possible in a home kitchen with a single fluorescent light fixture with an output of 12,000 lumens. To light a factory floor with dozens of times the area of the kitchen would require dozens of such fixtures. Thus, lighting a larger area to the same level of lux requires a greater number of lumens.

The piece above will give you some idea of the light given out by a lux.

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Anonymous Poster
#10
In reply to #9

Re: LUX calculation

02/01/2010 9:47 PM

You can directly measure the intensity of light using a lux meter. Came across a good model.

http://www.industrialindia.com/catalogs/Digital_Portable_Lux_Meter/Digital-Lux-Meter-HTC-LX104.pdf

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