AlwaysFUBAR
Well-Known Member
Is there a good way to get the hard water stains off mylar without damaging it?
yes, mylar is a bitch to deal with. I could never cut the perfect size which got me so damn mad, glossy white is your friend.i would tear that shit down and paint it flat white and never worry about it again. mylar is for the birds.
no, glossy is bad....you want flat white paint. ceiling paint is the best, its designed to reflect light.yes, mylar is a bitch to deal with. I could never cut the perfect size which got me so damn mad, glossy white is your friend.
It's designed to diffuse light.... Far from best form of reflection.no, glossy is bad....you want flat white paint. ceiling paint is the best, its designed to reflect light.
aside from it getting dirty and losing its reflectivity, it has to be installed without and wrinkles or it creates hot spots.
FLAT white paint is the easiest way to go.
your a wealth of knowedge as usual TTO. but my point is the flat white paint is the easiest to install and maintain. i dont think you can argue with that(not that we were arguingIt's designed to diffuse light.... Far from best form of reflection.
Wrinkles do not create hot spots. They decrease specular reflectivity(conversing increasing scattering/diffusion). Which decreases the chance of 'hot spots'. The best way to create a 'hot spot' is a parabolic reflector. I doubt anyone is making anywhere near the perfect parabola you'd need to actually focus enough radiance with high enough intensity to burn anything.
Flat white paint is certainly easy, not very efficient at reflecting intense(like, the same intensity that strikes it) light though. It does spread light and lower peak lux considerably(compared to aluminum reflectors), though.