View Full Version : Continuous Light for Large Softbox


Alain Nguyen
October 13th, 2008, 11:06 AM
I'm considering a 1000W mogul bulb on a Chimera Triolet/Photoflex Starlite or a configuration of multiple Lowel Tota Lights for the 54x72 Chimera Video Pro I just bought. What's the best light configuration for large softboxes? Any recommendations?

Perrone Ford
October 13th, 2008, 11:20 AM
I have become VERY partial to the CFL lights in my Rifa softbox. The light is gorgeous, it creates no heat, and it draws very little power. That would be my top choice.

Not to mention you can buy various color temperatures.

Dan Brockett
October 13th, 2008, 11:20 AM
I'm considering a 1000W mogul bulb on a Chimera Triolet/Photoflex Starlite or a configuration of multiple Lowel Tota Lights for the 54x72 Chimera Video Pro I just bought. What's the best light configuration for large softboxes? Any recommendations?

Depends on what you are shooting but to me, a 1k on a large Chimera will be too wimpy for all but the most dark locations or sets. I regularly use a 2k Mighty in my Medium Chimera and it is perfect for lighting up two shots and smaller areas. Did a shoot recently of two photographers at work in their studio and I lit both of them with this setup.

A 1k is not enough IMHO.

The perfect solution is the Barger Bag Lite but you may not be able to afford as it's not cheap.

Dan

Christopher Witz
October 13th, 2008, 11:29 AM
coolights by richard has a 8u flo mogal socket tube that puts out an equiv of 1000w tungsten.... can get in 5600 or 3200... draws 200w.

you could put a few of these in there.

I have one in a starlight and love it!

Bill Pryor
October 13th, 2008, 11:49 AM
Most fluorescents I've used are soft already and don't project enough to be use in a softbox, except as Dan noted in a pretty dark situation. Lowel 1K Totas work nicely in softboxes. If you could mount two of them in that box, I think it might be pretty good. For a box that big, though three would be better, maybe three with 750 watt lamps instead of 1Ks.

Perrone Ford
October 13th, 2008, 12:06 PM
Most fluorescents I've used are soft already and don't project enough to be use in a softbox, except as Dan noted in a pretty dark situation. Lowel 1K Totas work nicely in softboxes. If you could mount two of them in that box, I think it might be pretty good. For a box that big, though three would be better, maybe three with 750 watt lamps instead of 1Ks.

Well, I guess it does depend on your working distance, but I tend to work close with softboxes. If I want a large light source from a larger working distance, I'll use a silk. The people I am lighting are not pro's, and the temperatures of the fluos, is very welcome.

Alain Nguyen
October 13th, 2008, 03:23 PM
A 1k is not enough IMHO.

The perfect solution is the Barger Bag Lite but you may not be able to afford as it's not cheap.

Dan

My dilemma exactly, I suspect 1K tungsten would be barely sufficient, however going with a higher wattage lamp could prove tricky given the 1200w max rating of the Chimera Video Pro.

The light spread of a Barger Lite is excellent but the amp requirements would rapidly put me over the top of a 20amp circuit. Same if I used 3 Tota lights.

Creating a 1000W CFL fixture by ganging up 5x200W or 8x125W CFL would be an attractive proposition. Given that the size and sockets of these bulbs are larger than the average CFL, I wonder if that many would fit on a Fotodiox C-1600 fixture or similar... Fotodiox.com (http://www.fotodiox.com/shop/product_info.php?products_id=4123)

At this point I'm also considering a custom solution with a 1K Metal Halide bulb & electronic ballast. Retrofiting a Metal Halide mogul bulb and socket on a Chimera Triolet for example. Has someone attempted this before? On paper it seems very doable.

Bill Pryor
October 13th, 2008, 04:11 PM
I think fluorescents would be OK in a softbox if you use only the reflector, not the diffusion cover. I should have said that earlier, Perrone. When somebody says softbox, I always assume the diffusion on the front. I've used both fluorescents and LEDs a lot for lighting 2-person interviews, and the fluorescents are great undiffused. I have to diffuse the LEDs some.

If you had a bank of those fluorescents in a frame with some reflective material, ie., make your own softbox out of the silver reflective stuff, leaving off the diffusing cover, then you might have something that would work well. The lack of heat from cool lights is great on the talent. Of course if you can pull the lights in close enough, as Perrone says, that'll work fine. But generally unless it's a darkened studio, or nobody moves around much, that's not always possible.

Richard Andrewski
October 13th, 2008, 05:48 PM
Creating a 1000W CFL fixture by ganging up 5x200W or 8x125W CFL would be an attractive proposition. Given that the size and sockets of these bulbs are larger than the average CFL, I wonder if that many would fit on a Fotodiox C-1600 fixture or similar...

If you want to use a 125w or 200w bulb, you'll need mogul bases. The fixture you showed wouldn't work (all medium 'edison' bases) and you would find it too front heavy to hold its position on the angle adjustment stand adapter type that the fixture uses anyway. In fact if you use 5 200w bulbs you'll need a very hefty fixture indeed as the weight will be huge. In my opinion, you don't need 5 anyway. 1 or 2 bulbs in a specialized fixture would already be pretty good at around 1600w output equivalent to tungsten behind diffusion. As Bill Pryor noted, no diffusion is necessary for a fluorescent softbox. The real reason to use some, if you want, is to actually cut out some output if its too bright.


At this point I'm also considering a custom solution with a 1K Metal Halide bulb & electronic ballast. Retrofiting a Metal Halide mogul bulb and socket on a Chimera Triolet for example. Has someone attempted this before? On paper it seems very doable.

Its on my list of things to do. But we wouldn't use a 1K probably, more likely a 400w. You could even put a cluster of 3 400w and get 1200w actual draw but closer to 4800w output. 5K from a softbox would be impossible in real life because of the heat. 1200w actual draw is definitely doable--as we know you can run 2Kw in a softbox and people like Dan do it all the time.

One thing that is on my checklist though for such a test: can the UV emitted by such a bulb come through the diffusion? My instinct says no, but we still want to check it anyway.

Another thing I'd really like to do is make a super quick fold-down lantern fixture that uses 1 or more 400w bulbs / ballasts to make a low cost, cool light output spacelight. You could hang it off the ceiling of course in a studio or a boom on location. Such a light would make a great fixture for a multi-wall and covered floor cyc stage.

M. Paul El-Darwish
October 13th, 2008, 05:58 PM
They would be great if you removed the front diffusers! I'd just pack 3 or 4 CFL's in a big Softbox.

Most fluorescents I've used are soft already and don't project enough to be use in a softbox, except as Dan noted in a pretty dark situation. Lowel 1K Totas work nicely in softboxes. If you could mount two of them in that box, I think it might be pretty good. For a box that big, though three would be better, maybe three with 750 watt lamps instead of 1Ks.

Christopher Witz
October 13th, 2008, 06:30 PM
the only other reason to defuse flos is for a clean specular highlight.... for instance if your shooting chrome objects, bottles, or like I've been doing all day today shooting eye wear and the reflection of the light will appear in the lens of the glasses. In fact... I pulled my strobe head out of my broncolor hazylight and put a coolights 8u 200w daylight in there.... fantastic light!

Steve Oakley
October 13th, 2008, 10:50 PM
FEH! a 575 HMI will put out 2K of tungsten ( 2K + full CTB ). its my favorite light right now. even with full CTO its only a 2/3 stop loss or 1350W tungsten eq

reality is, tungsten is your grampa's lights. CFL / Flo lights work vastly better as do CID. I have a 2X24 40W flo light that runs head to head with my DP 500W + chimera. it works as a great hair light / side fill. its 1/10th the power & heat. I often use it with 5600K bulbs with the 575W. want to get another soon.

Richard Andrewski
October 14th, 2008, 03:39 AM
the only other reason to defuse flos is for a clean specular highlight....

You got me on that one. Very true.

Bill Pryor
October 14th, 2008, 09:07 AM
Yeah, good point. Some softboxes come with different levels of diffusion, so if you could get one that's as close as possible to gauze, it would be nice.

Perrone Ford
October 14th, 2008, 09:10 AM
Yeah, good point. Some softboxes come with different levels of diffusion, so if you could get one that's as close as possible to gauze, it would be nice.

Or you could make your own like I am about to do...

Some sheer fabric, 4 grommets, a couple pieces of velcro, and vioila! I like my RIFA softbox a lot, but the front diffusion fabric robs me of so much light from the CFLs, I need a different solution.

Dan Brockett
October 14th, 2008, 09:10 AM
tungsten is your grampa's lights.

You crazy whippersnappers with your LED/CFL and other acronym lights! Why I remember when we was lightin' Judy Garland up for the Wizard of Oz. Used 1.21 Jiggawhats of pure carbon arc bliss. Why it only raised the temperature on the stage about 80 degrees. Those were manly lights that real men lit real scenes with. I had a hard enough time adjusting to tungsten when they brought those in. Real lights make you sweat, dammit! Real lights have heat signatures that they smoke.

Soon you'll all be shooting with HD DSLRs that are rated at ASA 3200 and people won't care to use lights anymore. That'll be a sad day indeed.

Wimps.

Dan

Christopher Witz
October 14th, 2008, 09:57 AM
I don't know dan... seems to me that 'sad" is when one can't get their creative vision to completion because of limitations in tools/gear.

regarding lighting technologies... get ready for flo and LED to be replaced with OLED in the near ( 2012 ) future.... there's a GE factory printing sheets of OLED right now that you can replace the pull down shades on your windows with....

cameras are getting cleaner at higher sensitivities... while lights are getting brighter at lower power draw... what's not to like?

Dan Brockett
October 14th, 2008, 11:09 AM
I don't know dan... seems to me that 'sad" is when one can't get their creative vision to completion because of limitations in tools/gear.

regarding lighting technologies... get ready for flo and LED to be replaced with OLED in the near ( 2012 ) future.... there's a GE factory printing sheets of OLED right now that you can replace the pull down shades on your windows with....

cameras are getting cleaner at higher sensitivities... while lights are getting brighter at lower power draw... what's not to like?

Just kidding!

I find the new technologies quite exciting. I am shooting with a 4.19lb camera HD camcorder (HPX170) on a $179.00 dolly DV CADDIE (http://www.dvcaddie.com) using small little 150s and 300s mostly.

I made two of my own Diva 200s and my boss at work has purchased two of the Flolight LED500 lights that I have been using for greenscreen work. I have always laughed at the inefficiency of tungsten fixtures but the fact still remains that they have more punch in a smaller, lighter package to get the job done at a cheap price. I love HMIs, I used to own a K5600 Joker 1200 watt PAR but I sold it when I needed the money. A full HMI kit for what I need usually would still run me about $18,000.00 unfortunately, too expensive for budgets these days.

I really like LEDs, I rented a LitePanels DV kit to shoot a piece at a cocktail party for a Paramount project and it worked well but I still had to light up the BG with my tungsten kit. Faster cameras are a really convenient thing but to me, you still have to light to make things look good and LEDs are too expensive and too inefficient for serious work, other than as on-camera lights.

The Flolights are good but have a green spike that is obnoxious and they are open face, therefore non-focusable. Not as soft as my Divas or nearly as soft as my beloved Chimeras with tungsten fixtures, but too harsh to be used open face on talent. They are sort of in an in-between area that I find fine for ambient or lighting up an area, but not so useful for talent.

We live in a transitory time in lighting that is quite interesting, but for me and my needs, tungsten still fits the bill, other than the damn heat that they generate (when I fire up the 2ks on interiors, watch out, it becomes a sauna).

I like the Divas as well but for me, they do not render skin tones nearly as flattering as tungsten through a Chimera. Good for narrative stuff with talent moving but for talking heads, nothing comes close to a softbox.

Dan

Alain Nguyen
October 14th, 2008, 11:20 AM
You could even put a cluster of 3 400w and get 1200w actual draw but closer to 4800w output. 5K from a softbox would be impossible in real life because of the heat. 1200w actual draw is definitely doable--as we know you can run 2Kw in a softbox and people like Dan do it all the time.



Is there a ballast on the market that could power 3x400w MH bulbs? That would make a terrific softbox. Barger Lite on steroid.

Richard Andrewski
October 14th, 2008, 05:10 PM
Is there a ballast on the market that could power 3x400w MH bulbs? That would make a terrific softbox. Barger Lite on steroid.

I've never seen one. The best I've seen is a dual 400w used for grow/aquarium type scenarios. But what you need to do is start out by deciding which bulb to use, then decide the ballast setup. What you find when searching for bulb/ballast is a tradeoff between life, color temperature and size.

In other words, do you want to run a single ended HMI type bulb--something like the Philips MSR-400 (reasonably expensive, GX9.5 base/cold start, tough to find a ballast to run it from somewhere reasonably priced and only 1000 hours life); or can you use something like the EYE Lighting (Iwasaki Electric) 400w 90 CRI:

400 Watt 6500K Metal Halide Bulb - Iwasaki, Mogul Base - eBay (item 180286303271 end time Nov-04-08 16:30:36 PST) (http://cgi.ebay.com/400-Watt-6500K-Metal-Halide-Bulb-Iwasaki-Mogul-Base_W0QQitemZ180286303271QQcmdZViewItem?_trksid=p3286.m20.l1116)

It is 6500K though and it uses a mogul base which will be the common type for those bulbs and it is much bigger than something like the Philips MSR-400 but its life is 10,000 hours!

Its tough to find the color temperature and CRI you want exactly--as you can imagine, the 6500K is not optimal for mixing with other lighting but would be fine in controlled situations and all by itself or with natural daylight.

The same company has a dual ballast that should run that bulb (you should always confirm with them that the configuration will work together):

PFO 400W Pulse Start Dual Ballast - eBay (item 180287271507 end time Nov-07-08 13:55:32 PST) (http://cgi.ebay.com/PFO-400W-Pulse-Start-Dual-Ballast_W0QQitemZ180287271507QQihZ008QQcategoryZ46314QQtcZphotoQQcmdZViewItem)

You should also double confirm flicker and noise issues too.

In other words, for DIY purposes, you're pretty much looking at the Grow/Aquarium lighting area for simplicity and cost sake. Venture Lighting also has some interesting lamps more in the 5000K / CRI 90 range:

http://www.venturelighting.com/LampsHTMLDocuments/NaturalWhite_lamps.html

They make ballasts too. You just have to find a dealer selling the bulb and ballast.

Iwasaki does have one 1000w bulb like you wanted though:

http://www.eye.co.jp/sources/metal/pdf/p25.pdf

5500K, CRI 90. Just need a suitable flicker/noise free ballast after to drive it. I've never actually seen that bulb carried by a dealer so a bit of searching will be necessary. It is huge and would only be suitable for a softbox or big open face fixture since the point light source isn't small enough to be good for fresnels/pars as we know them.

Of course, I'm constantly evaluating bulbs and ballasts and looking for the hidden gems with everything you'd want--size, color temperature, CRI, no flicker, long life. As mentioned before, the Philips MSR-400 isn't ideal from life or cost perspective but it is very compact and a great point light source. Thus, that's the kind of bulb you'd want for a par or fresnel and of course it could work in a softbox too. We have a ballast we found for the Philips MSR-400 here in China and we will have at least one product based on that in the near future. Probably more products like softbox too. The best situation would be to have a glass protection beaker around them in the softbox like a K5600 does. Then you're sure about UV and explosion issues.

Steve Oakley
October 14th, 2008, 11:01 PM
Andrew,

with all due respect, a 1000 hr lifetime bulb is just fine for pro use. if you burned the light 8 hrs a day, thats 125 days of burn time, or you are working 2+ days a week, every week for a year. most freelancer's would be happy to be that busy. put another way, if you worked 125 days in one year, the cost of the bulb even at a low day rate would be nothing, .50/day for a $75 bulb. so a 1000hr bulb life is very acceptable for some one who is working a lot. for some one who only gets a few days per month, a 1000 hr bulb would last several years.

either way, its ok.

Alain Nguyen
October 15th, 2008, 02:21 PM
I've never seen one. The best I've seen is a dual 400w used for grow/aquarium type scenarios. But what you need to do is start out by deciding which bulb to use, then decide the ballast setup. What you find when searching for bulb/ballast is a tradeoff between life, color temperature and size.

In other words, do you want to run a single ended HMI type bulb--something like the Philips MSR-400 (reasonably expensive, GX9.5 base/cold start, tough to find a ballast to run it from somewhere reasonably priced and only 1000 hours life); or can you use something like the EYE Lighting (Iwasaki Electric) 400w 90 CRI:

400 Watt 6500K Metal Halide Bulb - Iwasaki, Mogul Base - eBay (item 180286303271 end time Nov-04-08 16:30:36 PST) (http://cgi.ebay.com/400-Watt-6500K-Metal-Halide-Bulb-Iwasaki-Mogul-Base_W0QQitemZ180286303271QQcmdZViewItem?_trksid=p3286.m20.l1116)

It is 6500K though and it uses a mogul base which will be the common type for those bulbs and it is much bigger than something like the Philips MSR-400 but its life is 10,000 hours!

Its tough to find the color temperature and CRI you want exactly--as you can imagine, the 6500K is not optimal for mixing with other lighting but would be fine in controlled situations and all by itself or with natural daylight.

The same company has a dual ballast that should run that bulb (you should always confirm with them that the configuration will work together):

PFO 400W Pulse Start Dual Ballast - eBay (item 180287271507 end time Nov-07-08 13:55:32 PST) (http://cgi.ebay.com/PFO-400W-Pulse-Start-Dual-Ballast_W0QQitemZ180287271507QQihZ008QQcategoryZ46314QQtcZphotoQQcmdZViewItem)

You should also double confirm flicker and noise issues too.

In other words, for DIY purposes, you're pretty much looking at the Grow/Aquarium lighting area for simplicity and cost sake. Venture Lighting also has some interesting lamps more in the 5000K / CRI 90 range:

http://www.venturelighting.com/LampsHTMLDocuments/NaturalWhite_lamps.html

They make ballasts too. You just have to find a dealer selling the bulb and ballast.

Iwasaki does have one 1000w bulb like you wanted though:

http://www.eye.co.jp/sources/metal/pdf/p25.pdf

5500K, CRI 90. Just need a suitable flicker/noise free ballast after to drive it. I've never actually seen that bulb carried by a dealer so a bit of searching will be necessary. It is huge and would only be suitable for a softbox or big open face fixture since the point light source isn't small enough to be good for fresnels/pars as we know them.

Of course, I'm constantly evaluating bulbs and ballasts and looking for the hidden gems with everything you'd want--size, color temperature, CRI, no flicker, long life. As mentioned before, the Philips MSR-400 isn't ideal from life or cost perspective but it is very compact and a great point light source. Thus, that's the kind of bulb you'd want for a par or fresnel and of course it could work in a softbox too. We have a ballast we found for the Philips MSR-400 here in China and we will have at least one product based on that in the near future. Probably more products like softbox too. The best situation would be to have a glass protection beaker around them in the softbox like a K5600 does. Then you're sure about UV and explosion issues.

Richard, thanks for the very thorough response,

The Eye MT1000B-D/BH is probably the bulb I need. After running a Google search, I'm now convinced it would be hard to find...
The Radium HRI-TS 1000W/D/S also has good specs, a compatible ballast & K12s-36 socket could be problematic to locate.

At the moment I'm evaluating the following bulb/ballast combos:

Osram Powerstar HQI-TS 400W/D with 400W Coralvue Dimmable ballast CV-DIM-400B

Iwasaki 400W 6.5k Mogul base with PFO 400w Dual HQI

Assuming the Osram/Coralvue combo is compatible my thought is that it would be ideal for video use. The bulb specs 5.2k, 93CRI, 12000h, F2c base look about right. The dimming ability is an attractive feature but how does dimming affect the color temperature and lamp life. The 3 ballasts needed to build a 1.2k fixture would be almost too heavy to carry on a plane. Any thoughts on this combo?

The Dual PFO ballast means I could carry one ballast instead of two but I see is no mention of dual voltage. 6.5k would require some color temp adjust.

Compromise compromise...

Richard Andrewski
October 15th, 2008, 05:43 PM
Compromise compromise...

Yeah. Metal halide's been around for quite a while but its still immature in many ways and hasn't been widely available especially in the USA which contributes to the immaturity. We do see the choices multiplying though and as these things are out for longer and longer there will be more suitable choices for media production lighting with all our criteria--size, weight, life, dual input voltage, noise levels (no fan or no noticeable oscillations of the bulb within human hearing frequencies), no flicker at any shutter speed or FPS, color temperature and CRI are all the criteria and its tough to get a match on everyone of those criteria.

You didn't mention universal voltage requirement before which is tougher to do with metal halide. Many manufacturers don't do it because they feel it adds to the size, weight and inefficiency of the ballast.

Dimming is tough with any metal halide including HMI. It does decrease bulb life (if that's a concern) and like all discharge bulbs there is a some color temperature change. I'd skip the dimming if at all possible as its not all that reliable with this class of ballast anyway--especially if they claim to be able to dim below 50%. Its pretty hard to hold ignition on the bulb below 50%. Most ballasts that do dimming won't go below that.

Here's a single 400w that does dual voltage:

400W 400 WATT DIGITAL GROW BALLAST MH + HPS 120/240V - eBay (item 380073117569 end time Oct-18-08 11:11:31 PDT) (http://cgi.ebay.com/400W-400-WATT-DIGITAL-GROW-BALLAST-MH-HPS-120-240V_W0QQitemZ380073117569QQcmdZViewItem?hash=item380073117569&_trkparms=72%3A1205|39%3A1|66%3A2|65%3A12|240%3A1318&_trksid=p3286.c0.m14)

Or this one:

ELECTRONIC BALLAST, 400W Metal Halide-UL--CORAL VUE - eBay (item 350059521419 end time Nov-08-08 06:57:08 PST) (http://cgi.ebay.com/ELECTRONIC-BALLAST-400W-Metal-Halide-UL-CORAL-VUE_W0QQitemZ350059521419QQcmdZViewItem?_trksid=p3286.m20.l1116)

The Icecap 400 should be pretty good but is single voltage 120v:

http://www.icecapinc.com/tfp%20icecap%20400-mh%202.pdf

Bill Ward
October 16th, 2008, 01:42 PM
Andrew,
with all due respect, a 1000 hr lifetime bulb is just fine for pro use. (snip) for some one who only gets a few days per month, a 1000 hr bulb would last several years.

Until some ham-footed bystander knocks the HMI light stand over. Then you just cry.

I use my 400-par Joker HMIs nearly every shoot. I only seem to replace a bulb a year, if that. It's the initial cost of the system that hurts the most.