***Pulls Jedi Hood alittle lower over his head***
I council patience and calm...
...anger leads to the dark side Master Novastar
***Pulls Jedi Hood alittle lower over his head***
I council patience and calm...
...anger leads to the dark side Master Novastar
Last edited by Jase Kala Maris; 04-19-2009 at 09:38 PM. Reason: council for calm no clams...
"clam"? lol
In order to see the Light,
you must sometimes risk the Dark.
TCSS MODERATOR
BLUE 8 Ready to ROCK and ROLL!
doh! that might help also but I will edit! alittle clam never hurt...
How come I never EVER get away with a little typo eh?
Sometimes people do.
But not if I think it's funny!
In order to see the Light,
you must sometimes risk the Dark.
TCSS MODERATOR
BLUE 8 Ready to ROCK and ROLL!
I've got an Amber LUX III LED that I'm going to convert, will this method be able to distribute the light evenly over the blade?
New to the forum: READ, READ, READ! it's the best way not to get flamed.
Time for a kirby dance <('-'<) (><) <('-')> (>'-')> (>'-'<)<('-'<) (><) <('-')> (>'-')> (>'-'<)
Ohh too late now, hehe!
Maybe next time I'll do a white P4, that or a green LUX III.
Thanks for the help!
The Amber led will light the blade just fine, as long as it it getting the proper current. For a filtered led, these blades really aren't that great....as the light travels to the end of the blade, the color will begin to was ouit, leaving you with a two-tone blade. I have found that for filtered led's to maintain a constant color throughout the blade that the white polycarbonate or nylon blades are best.
Got a question? Start Here. Have you tried the Thread Index yet? Most questions can be answered there.
Here's a question, has anyone tried to put the Corbin film in vertically instead of horizontally? If im not mistaken, it should spread the light into a really wide core... i think..
mTm
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