LIGHT REFLECTOR FILM FOR LUMINAIRES AMP LCD BACKLIGHT

What material is the soft light lamp film module made of

What material is the soft light lamp film module made of

These include an aluminum alloy body with multiple heat dissipation holes on its surface, a top and bottom honeycomb mesh convection structure for heat dissipation, and an optimized circuit design that provides multiple heat dissipation solutions, ensuring the safety of the. There are four basic types of diffusion material, each with its own character: polyester-based frost and white diffusion, fabrics (such as silks and nylon grid cloth), spun glass diffusions, and silent diffusions. Scrims, diffusion paper, softbox, and paper lanterns are all equipment that you can use to create LED soft light for filming. Scrims: When filming outdoors, special pieces of cloth known as scrims can be used to soften the film lighting. LED soft module is a kind of flexible lamp based on LED lamp bead, which is composed of flexible substrate, LED lamp bead and control chip. Soft light is light that tends to "wrap" around objects, projecting diffused shadows with soft edges, whereas hard light is more focused and produces harsher shadows. Examples include LED curved screens, cylindrical displays, or other unconventional shapes not possible with traditional rigid LED.

Read More
Switch port 5 has no light display

Switch port 5 has no light display

Verify that the transceiver is installed correctly and that the cable is connected correctly. System activity and status can be determined through the activity of the LEDs on the switch. Sometimes, you might find that only the power light is lit on your unmanaged switch when a DUT (device under test like a computer or a router) is connected to the switch, this problem might be caused by non-standard cable, the speed negotiation failure between the switch and the DUT, or the switch.

Read More
The light receiving module was damaged by the OTDR

The light receiving module was damaged by the OTDR

A patch cord, launch fiber, or fiber segment has the wrong core size, backscatter coefficient, or mode. OTDR (Optical Time Domain Reflectometer) testing is a vital technique for characterizing and troubleshooting optical fiber networks. If the receiving power is low (RxPower Low), the signal received is too weak, possibly due to excessive transmission distance or fiber damage.

Read More
100G optical module with four channels for different light reception

100G optical module with four channels for different light reception

This product is a parallel 100G QSFP28 optical module with 4 independent transmit and receive channels each capable of 25Gb/s operation. These standards often cause confusion when selecting the right module for your needs. The QSFP28 LR4 is a hot-pluggable, four-channel, and full-duplex optical transceiver module designed for long-distance transmission up to 10 km in the 100G Ethernet network with a working bandwidth of 1295nm to 1310nm. The 100G QSFP28 optical transceiver module is a high-speed optical communication module commonly used in application scenarios such as data centers, cloud computing, and high-performance computing. The commonly used module types include SR4, LR4, ER4, PSM4, ZR4, SR BIDI, and SWDM4.

Read More
Optical module receives light positive

Optical module receives light positive

An optical module typically consists of an optical transmitter (TOSA, Transmitter Optical Sub-Assembly, containing a laser diode), an optical receiver (ROSA, Receiver Optical Sub-Assembly, containing a photodetector), functional circuits, and optical (electrical). Subsequently, the driver semiconductor laser (LD) or light-emitting diode (LED) emits modulated optical signals at the corresponding rate. These pluggable modules remain relatively the same size over time but are expected to pack higher and higher data rates, consume lower power per data rate, operate at lower temperatures, and contain integrated circuits with smaller packages than their predecessors, all while ensuring reliable. Describes what an optical module is and FAQs, including the fundamentals, appearance and structure, key performance counters, common types, and naming conventions of optical modules, causes of optical module failures and corresponding protection measures, types of optical modules supported by.

Read More

Get In Touch

Connect With Us

📱

South Africa (Sales & Engineering HQ)

+27 10 247 8396

🇪🇺

Germany (EU Technical Support)

+49 69 975 331 42

📍

Headquarters & Manufacturing

Unit 7, Summit Place, 21 Summit Rd, Midrand, Johannesburg, 1685, South Africa