Welcome to ScubaBoard, an online scuba diving forum community where you can join over 205,000 divers from around the world discussing all things related to Scuba Diving. To gain full access to ScubaBoard (and make this large box go away) you must register for a free account. As a registered member you will be able to:
Participate in over 500 dive topic forums and browse from over 5,500,000 posts.
Communicate privately with other divers from around the world.
Post your own photos or view from well over 100,000 user submitted images.
Gain access to our free classifieds marketplace to buy, sell and trade gear, travel and services.
Use the calendar to organize your events and enroll in other members' events.
All this and much more is available to you absolutely free when you register for an account, so sign up today!
If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact the ScubaBoard Support Team.
Hi all
Does anyone here have any experience of the LED video light now sold with the Bonica HDDV package (also available independently).
I'm wondering if the 1500 lumens claim is realistic and and also if there is any "blueness" in the light as it is rated at 6500K?
Thanks
RR
I would also be very interested in hearing any reviews on this light. I was also wondering how it attaches to the housing? Does it use a standard 1 inch ball that would be compatible with an ultralight clamp?
So just to bump this thread up, are there still no reviews on this light? im very tempted to buy one and review it myself if not.
If the statements are true about it putting out 1500 lumens and running for 60 minutes on full power with 8 AA batteries, seems like a very good setup. my UK HID 100's did okay for some close up video and they only put out 500 lumens.
So just to bump this thread up, are there still no reviews on this light? im very tempted to buy one and review it myself if not.
If the statements are true about it putting out 1500 lumens and running for 60 minutes on full power with 8 AA batteries, seems like a very good setup. my UK HID 100's did okay for some close up video and they only put out 500 lumens.
If you do end up buying one let me know how it works. I am dying for some reviews. It sounds like a great set-up for a very affordable price, but who knows if it really does what it says. I'm wondering if it only puts out 1500 lums for the first 5 minutes or something and then begins to fade. The old adage if it sounds too good to be true then it probably is could apply here. But then again, why couldn't someone make a high powered and affordable light. Why do good lights have to cost 600-1000 and up? Those prices seem pretty inflated to me. If Fisheye can make a 1000 lum light and sell it for $599.00, why couldn't Bonica squeeze an extra 500 lums in and make it a few hundred cheaper? Granted I don't know anything about the quality of that company, but it does seem possible to make a light like that. Regardless, let me know if you get one. Thank you!
Yup, they fit most arms with "about " one inch balls. They do NOT fit the Sea and Sea Orange arm set.
Roger Roth recently made a small loc line attachment and says he is happy.
We'll be doing reviews and comparisons on video LED lights in Roatan in July (next month) and Bonica was contacted. After discussing the project with their rep (talked also during the Tacoma and Long Beach Shows) they basically were not interested in us comparing their lights to others on the market... we hoped that they would be proud of their lights for third party endorsements. Others have provided lights for our demo and review event. Their packages seem to be priced right for the recreational diver and it's too bad we won't have any of their gear to do the reviews on. Maybe next year. Rumor has it that most everyone is coming out with a new and improved LED light for next year... maybe the prices are coming down too!
Here's a quick youtube video featuring our video light G8V15 along with the JVC Everio HD video camera. Package details here: BonicaDive
Here's a review from Long Beach Scuba Show seminar speaker Josh Kaye-Carr:
I've been using Bonica's LED lights for a couple of months now and I am very impressed with their performance.
As a working underwater professional filmmaker, I've shot with everything from homemade camera and light housings to high-end custom designed cinema grade equipment and everything in-between. Having said that, the value for dollar spent is striking in these new lights.
They are well engineered, compact, efficient, and easy to use, and they are fully dim-able. One of their best features in my opinion is the evenness of the pool of light they deliver on the subject. You can test this for yourself by shining one of them on a plain white wall (or better yet, a projection screen) and look for hot spots. You won't find any. This is quite a feat for an inexpensive all-in-one light. The optical engineering is very good. Many much more expensive lights have noticeable hot spots.
They also provide relatively high output for their size. At 1500 lumens, they are actually more powerful than several competitive models that cost nearly $2500 per pair. A pair of Bonica LEDs retails for $900. Angle of coverage is listed at 60 degrees and while not quite as wide as some other lights, this can be compensated for by judicious placement and angling of the heads.
Are there any downsides? Sure, there always are. Being self-powered, they are heavier than lamp-only designs that have separate batteries. This requires that your mounting arms be of the more substantial variety. While Bonica's provided arms are good, there are better choices on the market but they may cost you almost as much as Bonica's affordable LEDs themselves, so buyer beware. Also, being self-powered, when the batteries become exhausted, you need to surface to change or charge them. Some other designs allow you to change power sources underwater, but again, at a substantial increase in price. For most underwater video hobbyists, this is not a significant minus.
On balance, Bonica has developed one of the best affordable underwater lights available on the market. This includes systems costing well over twice as much. While I will continue to use many other lighting systems in my professional work, there will always be a pair of Bonica LEDs in my kit bag.