With very little detail as regards your expectations or reasons for wanting the fibre optics, the situation is more about what effect you want to achieve.
Examples are numerous,and such things as novelties are sold in many places for functional, but not so practical decorative lamps, etc. I want to assume that the size of the bulb must be relative in power and light emission, to the size of the fiber.
I'm not a scientist but have an example. The larger the fiber, the more dilluted the light, from its source as it reaches an end of a fiber, to actually emit any practical light
2007-08-26 13:50:31
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answer #1
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answered by DIY Doc 7
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Stef,
Good idea, at least you are thinking, it just will not work - having one bulb and trying to illuminate multiple locations by distributing the light with fiber optics. Even if you attempt to increase the light output with a magnifier on either end of the fiber, still will not do it.
The physics of it will not give you enough light to illuminate anything more than the lights in the dash of your car.
2007-09-02 08:56:15
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answer #2
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answered by JC 3
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a million) you ought to rephrase that query, is it a clean dig? what share voice calls do you like a carry? a million million residences, FTTH, approximately £43bn. 2) Fibre on the 2nd has yet to realize the better shrink of throughput. 3) Depands on which type of cable you're utilising, and how a techniques 'long distance' is.
2016-10-17 01:32:35
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Hmm ...trick questions..why don't you check with expert ie lighting-guide-to.com, usually optics fibre light will decrease with length of cable. So it depends on the design. ie The longer the cable from the source, the weaker the light source at the end of optic cable. It's indirect lighting which is not an efficient source of lighting but it's trendy now.
2007-08-30 06:45:10
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answer #4
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answered by benjy chang 2
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You will have a lot of light, and it's bright.
2007-09-01 23:54:37
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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