48W LED work light setup with installation plate, 2 x square 24W 6000K LED lights with 60° flood beam each
48W LED work light for vehicles. Two lights each with 8pcs 3W high intensity Epistar LEDs in 6000K (near daylight) and a wide 60 degree opening angle.
48W LED work light for vehicles. 2 lights each with 8pcs 3W high intensity Epistar LEDs in 6000K (near daylight) and a wide 60 degree opening angle. The lamp body is cast aluminium, the brackets are stainless steel and the lenses are polycarbonate. E-approved luminaire. To be mounted behind the registration plate. Both lights are directional. They rotate 360° horizontally and can be tilted 170°.
- Waterproof, IP67
- Operating voltage 10-30V DC
- Total 2880 raw lumens, 1440 per lamp
- 48W power, 24W per luminaire
- Power consumption 3.6A @ 12V and 1.8A @24V
- Reference number 25
- Delivery status In Stock
- Brand Ledstore
- Breadcrumbs Home LED light stripsVehicle 48W LED work light setup with installation plate, 2 x square 24W 6000K LED lights with 60° flood beam each
- Category Vehicle
- SKU auto-work-plate-48W
- Designed in Finland No
- Energy class No
- Chainable No
- Hull colour No
- Guarantee (year) No
- CRI No
- Colour rendering (CRI ±3) No
- IP class No
- Installation method No
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WHAT IS CRI, THE COLOUR RENDERING INDEX
High quality LED lights also have a high colour rendering index, or CRI. A good colour rendering index (CRI) for home use is above 90, and nowadays many market lights are unfortunately closer to 80.
CRI tells you how well an LED light displays colours as they should be. For designers and architects, as well as interior designers, it should be one of the most important considerations. Make sure the lighting is perfect so that your artwork is what it is meant to be.
Colour rendering index
The colour rendering index is expressed as a number on a scale from zero to 100, where 0 = no colour rendering and 100 = full colour rendering. The colour rendering index of LED lights is also known as Ra, which is measured on a smaller scale than CRI. This Ra value does not include red tones or skin tones, for example, so it is a 'glossed' figure for the true quality of an LED light.
RA value
The Ra value measures the reproduction of colours using eight different reference colours. CRI takes into account the wider (15) wavelength range, including reds and other warm colours.
The Ra value is calculated by cutting the wavelength range, weighting the blue and violet tones, and calculating the weighted average of R numbers 1-8.
Excluded from the Ra value are, for example, the colour rendering of bright reds, yellows and greens, and shades close to skin tone. These are described by R-values between 9 and 15. The following is a picture of a measurement result that easily confuses the consumer.
This measurement is from a 9W CCT Led spot
Read more on this topic:
Colour rendering of LEDs - What is the difference between CRI and Ra-value?