Ellipsoidal Reflector Spotlight, ERS, or just Ellipsoidal is the correct generic name for a large class of lighting instruments more commonly called Lekos, Source Fours, and Profiles (in Europe and other non-US locations). LekoLight (the contraction of the surnames of inventors Charles
Levy and Edward
Kook of Century Lighting) was a trademark in 1932 that improved the technology which made it the best ERS of its day. For decades, all ERSs were erroneously called Lekos, whether or not they were made by Century or any of its iterations.
In 1992, Electronic Theater Controls (ETC) redefined the technology when they created the
Source Four. The key developments are a glass dichroic reflector designed around the HPL lamp with four filament segments--hence the name Source Four. This fixture has been widely adopted as the industry standard today, with well over two-million units sold since its introduction in 1992.
ERS instruments get their name from the elliptically shaped mirror chamber which surrounds the lamp. An ellipse is a shape with two foci. In theory, by placing the lamp at one focus of an elliptically shaped mirror, all light leaving that lamp will be reflected through the other focus. In practice, the ellipse is cut in half before that second focus and instead light is directed through the
gate into a lens tube. At this
gate are four framing shutters which may be used to shape the beam. Optionally an iris may be placed here to create a smaller circular beam, or a huge variety of steel or glass gobos may project patterns or images.
Older ERS instruments were classified by their lens size and focal length: 6x9, 6x12, 6x16, and so on. Newer ERS instruments are classified by their beam angle: 36°, 26°, 19°, et cetera.
ERS instruments can be divided into two categories, based upon how the lamp enters the reflector: the obsolete, less-efficient
Radial ERS, and the modern
Axial ERS.
Another modern, advanced design is the
Strand Selecon Pacific series. Other modern ERSs are the Altman
Shakespeare, Strand
SL Coolbeam (discontinued July 2009), and Leviton
Leo.