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Don Wiss
 
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Default Best reflective surface for skylight shaft?

I have a skylight shaft that I've like to maximize the light coming down.
At the bottom is a stained glass window. I could paint the shaft sides
gloss white. But what about silver? Is there some reflective sheet metal
that I can buy that is even better? A glass mirror would probably be a bit
difficult to get up there.

Thanks, Don donwiss at panix.com.
  #2   Report Post  
Edwin Pawlowski
 
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Default Best reflective surface for skylight shaft?


"Don Wiss" wrote in message
...
I have a skylight shaft that I've like to maximize the light coming down.
At the bottom is a stained glass window. I could paint the shaft sides
gloss white. But what about silver? Is there some reflective sheet metal
that I can buy that is even better? A glass mirror would probably be a bit
difficult to get up there.

Thanks, Don donwiss at panix.com.


Bright and shiny. I saw one of the DIY shows where they installed a
skylight that used a round flexible duct to send the light from roof to the
room ceiling. It was bright silvery coated like a mirror. Maybe you could
get some highly polished stainless steel sheet metal or a bright foil
lining. I have no idea where you would buy it, but the silvered Mylar film
would work well. The stuff they make balloons from or line potato chip
bags.
Ed

http://pages.cthome.net/edhome


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Michael Daly
 
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Default Best reflective surface for skylight shaft?

On 30-Jul-2004, Don Wiss wrote:

I could paint the shaft sides
gloss white. But what about silver? Is there some reflective sheet metal
that I can buy that is even better? A glass mirror would probably be a bit
difficult to get up there.


It would take a very good quality mirror to reflect more light than a good
white paint. Cheap mirrors may only reflect about 70% or less of the light.

Buy a high quality white paint and look for one with a high LRV (light
reflectance value). IIRC, matt white should actually have a higher
reflectance than gloss.

Mike
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B
 
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Default Best reflective surface for skylight shaft?

I think glossy white paint or silver or even mirrors will not pull more
photons out of the sky than plain white paint. White paint will do the job.
-B

"Don Wiss" wrote in message
...
I have a skylight shaft that I've like to maximize the light coming down.
At the bottom is a stained glass window. I could paint the shaft sides
gloss white. But what about silver? Is there some reflective sheet metal
that I can buy that is even better? A glass mirror would probably be a bit
difficult to get up there.

Thanks, Don donwiss at panix.com.





  #6   Report Post  
 
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Default Best reflective surface for skylight shaft?

B wrote:

I think glossy white paint or silver or even mirrors will not pull more
photons out of the sky than plain white paint. White paint will do the job.


Sure, but I'm looking at a table that says white paint has 80% reflectance,
vs 86% for aluminum foil and 92% for aluminized Mylar. The mirrorlike Mylar
can minimize the number of bounces in the shaft, compared to diffuse white
paint, further increasing the intensity at the bottom. A south-facing
reflective sunscoop over the skylight can also help.

Nick

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Edwin Pawlowski
 
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Default Best reflective surface for skylight shaft?



B wrote:

I think glossy white paint or silver or even mirrors will not pull more
photons out of the sky than plain white paint. White paint will do the job.



It is not a question of pulling photons out of the sky. It is a question of
moving the ones that you do have in the most efficient manner. There are
much better materials than white paint to do the job. Depending on the
particular pain and gloss, it is maybe 75 to 80% efficient. I don't have
the specs on a mirror, but I'd guess it to be over 90%.


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Michael Daly
 
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Default Best reflective surface for skylight shaft?

On 31-Jul-2004, "Edwin Pawlowski" wrote:

Depending on the
particular pain and gloss, it is maybe 75 to 80% efficient. I don't have
the specs on a mirror, but I'd guess it to be over 90%.


Paints can be up to 90% reflective. These are high-quality titanium oxide
based paints, of course. There are other oxides as well, but the Ti stuff
is probably easier to find.

Mirrors are highly variable, depending on the quality of the coating. Getting
over 90% is quite difficult and expensive. I remember paying quite a premium
to get a telescope mirror that was over 90% - the standard quality (still
higher than, say, a bathroom mirror) was in the mid 80s.

Dollar for dollar, paint is a much better deal and easier to install.

Mike
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Don Wiss
 
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Default Best reflective surface for skylight shaft?

On Sat, 31 Jul 2004 15:44:05 GMT, Michael Daly wrote:

On 31-Jul-2004, "Edwin Pawlowski" wrote:

Depending on the
particular pain and gloss, it is maybe 75 to 80% efficient. I don't have
the specs on a mirror, but I'd guess it to be over 90%.


Paints can be up to 90% reflective. These are high-quality titanium oxide
based paints, of course. There are other oxides as well, but the Ti stuff
is probably easier to find.


What is the paint they use when they paint flat roofs? Mine was just
painted silver, and checking out the job just now I find it very
reflective. Certainly paint would be the easiest. Are these titanium oxide
paints readily available in my local hardware store?

Don donwiss at panix.com.
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Default Best reflective surface for skylight shaft?

Michael Daly wrote:

...I'm looking at a table that says white paint has 80% reflectance,
vs 86% for aluminum foil and 92% for aluminized Mylar.


Considering you can see through aluminized Mylar, I have my doubts about this
claim.


Full sun is about 10,000 footcandles. We can see in 0.1 FC,
ie we can "see through" something that's 99.999% reflective.

Consider what they cover telescope observatories with. The domes are almost
always painted white with a high-titanium content paint. They are trying to
reflect as much heat and light as possible in order to keep the observatory
from heating up during the day. When have you ever seen them cover it with
a mirror finish?


That's not easy to do.

The mirrorlike Mylar can minimize the number of bounces in the shaft,
compared to diffuse white paint, further increasing the intensity at
the bottom.


Only if you can get it nice and smooth.


I disagree. Wrinkles make little difference.

Nick

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dadiOH
 
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Default Best reflective surface for skylight shaft?

Don Wiss wrote:
I have a skylight shaft that I've like to maximize the light coming
down. At the bottom is a stained glass window. I could paint the
shaft sides gloss white. But what about silver? Is there some
reflective sheet metal that I can buy that is even better? A glass
mirror would probably be a bit difficult to get up there.


Remember the foil reflecting material used over car dashes? Use that or
similar for max reflectance. However, max reflectance may not give you the
max output at the bottom because they are so directional. Think of a
mirror...you have to angle it around to reflect the source light where you
want it to go. For your purpose, a non specular (not glossy) white or
aluminum paint would probably be best due to the usual shape of a skylight
shaft.


--
dadiOH
_____________________________

dadiOH's dandies v3.0...
....a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico
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Default Best reflective surface for skylight shaft?

dadiOH wrote:

Don Wiss wrote:


I have a skylight shaft that I've like to maximize the light coming down...


Remember the foil reflecting material used over car dashes? Use that or
similar for max reflectance. However, max reflectance may not give you the
max output at the bottom because they are so directional.


Not according to the usual lightwell calculations.

Think of a mirror...you have to angle it around to reflect the source light
where you want it to go. For your purpose, a non specular (not glossy)
white or aluminum paint would probably be best due to the usual shape of
a skylight shaft.


I doubt that. Can you find a specific example that makes your claim true?

Nick

10 RHO=.9'lightwell wall reflectance
20 W=4'lightwell width (feet)
30 L=8'lightwell length (feet)
40 C=4'concentration factor
50 EC=.8'concentrator efficiency
60 TFLUX=8000*W*L*C*EC'total flux entering well (FC)
70 FOR F = 1 TO 8'floor number
80 H=8*(8-F)'lightwell depth (feet)
90 R=5*H*(W+L)/(W*L)'well cavity ratio
100 E=EXP(-.0443*R/RHO)'transmission
105 PRINT F,E
110 ATTN=ATTN+1/E'cumulative attenuation
120 NEXT
130 ATA=ATTN/8'average attenuation
140 PRINT ATA'average attenuation
150 AREA=32^2*8'floor area (ft^2)
160 ER=.9'secondary reflector efficiency
170 PRINT ER*TFLUX/ATTN/AREA
180 ER=.6'eg 2 wall bounces, and a bottom reflection...
190 PRINT ER*TFLUX/AREA

Floor Lightwell
number Transmittance

1 .0056940
2 .0119144
3 .0249304
4 .0521655
5 .1091535
6 .2283978
7 .4779098
8 1

Average diffuse well attenuation: 41.9

Illumination from diffuse well: .268 footcandles

Illumination from mirror well: 60.0 footcandles(?)

Nick

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Default Best reflective surface for skylight shaft?

dadiOH wrote:

...max reflectance may not give you the max output at the bottom because
they are so directional.


Not according to the usual lightwell calculations.

...a non specular (not glossy) white or aluminum paint would probably be
best due to the usual shape of a skylight shaft.


I doubt that. Can you find a specific example that makes your claim true?


Can you line a skylight chase with mirrors (or even specular reflectors) so
they reflect the skylight opening to the ceiling opening?


Think "non-imaging." Direct sun aside, the question is: "Can a lightwell
with diffuse reflective walls move more lumens into a room than one with
specular walls, given a skylight that collects a certain solid angle of
diffuse isotropic sun?"

Intuitively, light rays enter the skylight from all directions. If the
lightwell is vertical, vertical rays from overhead sky pass all the way
down the well with no reflections in either case, like shining a laser
down a pipe. Slightly off-vertical rays are reflected from the walls far
down in the lightwell. More tilted rays hit the walls nearer the top.

Specular reflectors pass these rays downwards with little intensity loss.
Diffuse reflectors scatter the light all over the place--down, up, and
horizontally to adjacent walls...

We could make this more mathematical, if you like.

Nick

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JerryMouse
 
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Default Best reflective surface for skylight shaft?

Don Wiss wrote:
I have a skylight shaft that I've like to maximize the light coming
down. At the bottom is a stained glass window. I could paint the
shaft sides gloss white. But what about silver? Is there some
reflective sheet metal that I can buy that is even better? A glass
mirror would probably be a bit difficult to get up there.

Thanks, Don donwiss at panix.com.


Think LOTS of optical fibers.


  #19   Report Post  
JerryMouse
 
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Default Best reflective surface for skylight shaft?

Don Wiss wrote:
I have a skylight shaft that I've like to maximize the light coming
down. At the bottom is a stained glass window. I could paint the
shaft sides gloss white. But what about silver? Is there some
reflective sheet metal that I can buy that is even better? A glass
mirror would probably be a bit difficult to get up there.

Thanks, Don donwiss at panix.com.


Or a sunlamp in the shaft.

Hmmm. Can one get a REVERSE photocell?


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