Old Strand Lights - UK, NZ, SA, Oz, Europe

I recently stumbled upon this site and am very pleased I did! What a great resource you we have here.

Although I am not is the habit of pushing sales items I thought you may be interested is a wee product for converting your old Strand 23s and 123s to take newer and cheaper T/26, 650w lamps. It's called the C-Block and you can check it out and me on the Company website Enter

My interests include collecting and restoring older Strand stage lights and putting them back out there in the theatres. I feel that there are some wonderful beam qualities that are particular to some of the older lamps that are harder to find today in a ‘maximum light output’ driven design. How many remember the fantastic beam angle and smoothness of the 223 Fresnels. Still a great lantern...

Anyway enough of the reminiscing. Today's lanterns are pretty amazing too. Try the Selecon Pacific cool light. Great light control and optics but keep a piece of soft Hamburg frost and a top hat for a nice blending beam.

Cheers

Phill Dexter:cool:
 
Welcome, Phill. Upon reading your profile, I'm only slightly disappointed that you're not David Hersey.:)

I bet you could add some insight to this thread.

General consensus seems to be the only future for fixtures such as the Altman 360 Profile is immediate replacement with a SourceFour. Which would you rather use, a Pat23 or a Selecon Pacific Zoomspot?
 
Which would you rather use, a Pat23 or a Selecon Pacific Zoomspot?
The venue i volunteer at still uses the good ol pattern 23 and the pacfic zoom spot. Personally i really can't go past the quality that is the patt 23, a light designed for function not for some art studio

Pure Beauty
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Just Another Horseshoe light:twisted:
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... Personally i really can't go past the quality that is the patt 23, a light designed for function not for some art studio ...
I'm sorry, but MOST, if not all, Theatrical Lighting Designers choose a fixture based on its photometrics, NOT its visual appeal or craftsmanship/manufacturing tolerances.
 
I'm sorry, but MOST, if not all, Theatrical Lighting Designers choose a fixture based on its photometrics, NOT its visual appeal or craftsmanship/manufacturing tolerances.

Reliability must come into it at some point, you want a reliable light that you know will work every time. How it looks is just a secondary issue but i personally think it plays a part, and i am aware of your dislike of some strand products derek:mrgreen:.

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I'm sorry, but MOST, if not all, Theatrical Lighting Designers choose a fixture based on its photometrics, NOT its visual appeal or craftsmanship/manufacturing tolerances.
Hi Derek, I had the opportunity to production LX for Hersey twice in the last 15 years and a very insightful experience it was.

With regards to which luminaire I would prefer when given the choice of a Pacific and a P23 it would depend on the situation. If it were a small low grid/roofed little theatre with little hanging space then it would be the 23. More height probably the Pacific. It's all about choosing the right instrument for the job.

Also note that designers usually choose their lanterns from the house stock that is normally purchased over time by technical managers. They will quite often make their choice based on price, construction quality, cost of lamp, appearance and ease of access to parts. The photometrics can be a little further down the list in my experience.

Also photometrics only provide optimum light output. They don't give any indication to beam quality.
 

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