Tuesday, 24 July 2012
Composition
A typical environment for my light design. I have chosen to go with a hanging light as it will look the best and not hurt anyone whilst spinning. In my redesign I will produce just one but the idea of many of them hanging down from the ceiling would look awe inspiring.
Another plan
Deconstruction
The deconstruction was almost irrelevant for my product as it comes deconstructed and requires a little bit of assembly. It gave me a chance to look at the flaws within the current design and gave me direction for improving it
The plastic connectors are quite fragile and one of the connectors broke off when I had been playing with it. They don't have any value either, they were purely designed just to connect the pieces but they could be designed much more durable and creatively and would make them much more aesthetically pleasing. For my redesign I will most likey laser cut the connectors out of acrylic and pay much more attention to the way they look as they are a throw-away piece without much value.
The plastic connectors are quite fragile and one of the connectors broke off when I had been playing with it. They don't have any value either, they were purely designed just to connect the pieces but they could be designed much more durable and creatively and would make them much more aesthetically pleasing. For my redesign I will most likey laser cut the connectors out of acrylic and pay much more attention to the way they look as they are a throw-away piece without much value.
Monday, 23 July 2012
Research
I decided
to do some research on glow sticks themselves rather than the glow balls which
I was unable to find much on.
Glow
sticks are a translucent plastic tube that contains isolated chemicals, one
housed in a glass tube within the plastic tube. The light from a glow stick is
produced when the two chemicals mix creating a chemiluminescent reaction.
The inner glass tube usually contains Phenyl oxalate and a fluorescent dye. the
other chemical in the glow stick is Hydrogen peroxide. a by-product of the reaction
is phenol.
The
first patents on chemiluminescent reactions arrived in the 60s and 70s with the
first patent attributed to Bernard Dubrow and Eugene Daniel Guth in 1965.
The current glow stick design where a glass tube designed to be broken encased
in a plastic tube was patented in 1976 by Vincent J. Esposito, Steven M.
Little, and John H. Lyons.
EL WIRE
El wire
requires a driver to function as it requires an AC current rather than a DC at
a frequency of 60hz to 4000hz and a voltage between 50-120V AC RMS.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)

