Features
The color2go is a portable spectrophotometer, that combines color and 60° gloss measurement with a compact and rugged design. Operation via the large touchscreen is icon-based and just as intuitive as using the instrument connected to the included smart-chart data analysis software. In addtion, the color2go provides you with a warning message on the display if whether a material contains fluorescence.
Technical Attributes
Technical Properties
Color Measurement
Gloss Measurement
± 0,1 GU
± 0,2 GU
± 0,5 GU
± 1,0 GU
0 - 100
General
Standards
Delivery Content
Downloads
Safety Instructions
Short Instructions
Knowledge
The basic building blocks of color measurement
Visual color perception is influenced by our individual color preferences, which are dependent on personal factors (mood, age, gender etc.), environment (lighting, surrounding etc.) as well as our ability to communicate color and color differences. A color looks different in the department store (cool white fluorescent lighting) than at home (warm, incandescent lighting). In order to guarantee consistent color and appearance under all possible circumstances, it is essential to standardize light source, observer and understand the spectral remission data of the object. This information will be the basis for calculation of colorimetric data as it is used for color communication and color QC in production.
Read moreColor Difference Equations for Solid Colors
It is now almost 100 years since, in 1931, the CIE Yxy chromaticity color space was defined by the “International Commission on Illumination (CIE)”. To overcome its limitations of not being uniform, the CIE recommended two alternate color spaces since then: CIELAB (or CIE 1976 L*a*b*) and CIELUV (or CIE L*u*v*). They are based on the opponent color theory of color vision, which says that two colors cannot be both green and red at the same time, nor blue and yellow at the same time. During the last years developments of new color difference equations and color spaces were carried out. Their goal was to improve the correlation between visual perception and instrumentally measured values. Additionally, they wanted to permit the use of a single number tolerance for all colors.
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