Aamsco Mercury Backlit Mirror Illuminated by an Inerior LED Border

$1,128.26 $997 Free Shipping

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ADA CompliantETLMade in Poland
A bight ring of LEDs shining through the mirror illuminate the mirror from the interior ring. With polished edges, it's simple elegance suitable for the bathroom, entrance way, office or any room in the house. The LEDs are rated at 30,000 hours, and have a color temperature of 2,600k - 2,800k, Warm White, with a Color Rendering Index (CRI) of 90+. The mirror conforms to ADA guidelines and is suitable for damp locations such as the bathroom, with an IP55 Rating (see IP55 Explained). It is also ETL listed. The light output is at 2235 Lumens is very bright, with a tiny electrical consumption of only 36 Watts. This is a hardwired mirror and requires an on-off switch. It is non-dimmable.
Features
  • MERCURY by Amsco - a round backlit mirror with polished edges, illuminated by a 1.18" thick ring of birght LEDs inset, resulting in a 22.04" diameter central viewing area.
  • The mirror is suitable for damp locations such as a bathroom with an IP55 Rating (see explanation). It's not too large and will also work well in an entrance-way or office setting.
  • Mercury has a 27.55" Diameber x 1.73" Depth held to a tolerence overall of 0.125". Surface mounted, and hardwired, the mirror needs a separate wall switch.
  • The mirror consumes only 36 Watts and delivers 2,235 Lumens - very bright. The LED color temperature is 2,600-2,800 degrees Kelvin, or Warm White with a CRI > 90. Non-dimmable.
  • Conforms to ADA guidelines, has an IP55 rating (see explanation) and is ETL listed. 3-Year manufacturer's warranty.
Aamsco

About Aamsco



Aamsco, since 1975, has been manufacturing innovative lighting solutions for companies, wordwide. In the suburbs of New York City, their original vintage lighting company was formed by Bob Rosenzweig to manufacture antique light bulbs. With Bob's creativity, Aamsco began expanding and moved to New Jersy, and ultimately in 2001 relocated to Summerville, South Carolina where Aamsco continues to grow to this day.
IP55 Explained

IP Ratings - Ingress Protection and What it Means


IP Ratings are a classification of the degree of protection against the intrusion of objects including things like hands and fingers, dust, accidental contact, and water. The concept is to provide a more standardized and meaningful set of more specific descriptive terms other than vague marketing lingo, such as "waterproof".

The two digits after the letters "IP" in the rating have separate meanings. The first digit denotes protection against solids. The second digit deals with protection from liquids.
IP55's First digit - 5 - Protection Against Solids
Protection against any large surface of the body, such as the hand, fingers, small objects, tools, most wires, screws, etc, and most dust.

IP55's Second digit - 5 - Protection Against Liquids
Equipment is protected against the ingress of water including dripping water, water from a spray at any angle up to 60 degrees from the vertical, water splashing from any direction, and water from a nozzle (6.3mm) from any direction.

For further information and full ratings charts visit https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IP_Code.
3,500k vs. 5,500k

Color Temperature Comparison



color temperature thermometer
Color Temperature is not Brightness Color temperature describes the color of the light.

The color temperature of any light bulb, including LEDs is measured in degrees Kelvin ("k").  The higher the color temperature, the closer the light is to pure white light at 10,000° K.  A blue sky sunny day at noon has a color temperature of about 5,500° K.  On a very bright cloud-covered day, the sky registers a color temperature of about 6,500° K., while a "regular" incandescent light bulb has a color temperature of about 2,700° K.

The color temperature of the lighting in your mirror may affect the way people see you in different situations.  It's best, therefore, to choose a lighted makeup mirror with a color temperature to approximate your most frequent environment.

Many of our LED mirrors have their color temperature specified. And some makeup mirrors have adjustable or switchable color temperatures.  For those where color temperature is not specified a reasonable guide is this: For incandescent bulbs, a color temperature of around 3,000° K. is normal.  Fluorescents and LEDs with no color temperature specification have color temperatures around 4,600° K. The chart below can serve as a guide.


If you're planning for an outdoor day, the higher the color temperature the better. For evenings on the town, 2,700&deb; K. to 3,500° K. is best. For office environment lighting conditions, color temperatures around 4,500° K. provide the closest match. Color Temperature explained
About CRI

Color Rendering Index (CRI)

CRI Comparison photos
The color rendering index (CRI) is a measure of the ability of a light source to display the colors of various objects faithfully when compared the a natural light source. Light sources with a high CRI value are desirable in color-critical applications such as neonatal care and art restoration. Generally the higher the CRI, the more pleasing to the eye.

The highest possible CRI value is 100 and is frequently achieved by incandescent or "regular" light bulbs. Fluorescent "cool white" bulbs have a CRI of around 50 to 60, but some high-end multi-phosphor fluorescents can go up to 98. LEDs typically have an a CRI around 80, and better, more expensive LEDs can have CRIs up to 97 or 98.


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