Cloud lamp

Cloud lamp

prusaprinters

<p>I finally decided to replace my 400W halogen light with something more energy efficient. I like strong indirect lighting and found it difficult to obtain this with leds. There are some powerful projectors that are meant for exterior, but the affordable ones usually provide an unpleasant light, with perceptible scintillation and a bad color accuracy.</p><p>So I designed this decorative cloud-shaped lamp which needs ten GU10 bulbs (led only!) with their sockets. The holes are shaped according the the cheap leds and sockets that I bought, so the model might need some adjustment depending on the provider. The bulbs should have a narrow angle (30°) so that the lamp itself does not get to much light.</p><p>I printed it in white PETG (avoid PLA as the temperature would be too high even with leds) and after some time, I can see that some of the tubes that contains the bulbs have shrunk a little, opening small cracks between layers, so polycarbonate would probably be a better choice. Printed with 0.8 wall thickness and 3% cubic infill, and the result is really rigid. Due to its size, the model is rotated 45° to fit the build plate, but it still requires a 230x230 area, which can be obtained on Ender 3 by hacking the slicer's configuration. A small amount of supports is required. I used 0.15 layer height for a nice finish but I don't think this is critical. My print was partially successful: I had a layer shift just at the start of the top surface, so I re-printed the top and assembled it on the bottom with superglue (the seam is slightly visible on the pictures).</p><p>Each bulb should be inserted in its socket before putting it into the lamp, as it would be difficult to rotate it afterwards. The wiring is somewhat messy, there is limited room bellow the bulbs. I used a glue gun at some places to maintain everything and ensure that it can lay flat.</p><p>I'm happy with the result ! It looks like what I had in mind. The light is mainly indirect, but a little amount goes through the lamp as the material is quite translucent (the infill pattern is visible so it should be carefully chosen). And the holes are significantly deeper than the bulbs' height which effectively prevents dazzling (unless looking at the lamp with a high incidence angle).</p><p>If anyone wants to replicate or modify this, fell free to ask for further details !</p>

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