Model:SYS1004
This instrument comes standard with a 4mm measuring aperture, specifically designed for the color measurement of small-area and small-spherical products. It accurately measures chromaticity parameters such as Lab, RGB, XYZ, LCh, Yxy, and LUV, and automatically calculates color difference values; during color matching, users can directly utilize the measured data to quickly formulate color-mixing recipes.
The Sanyuanse Color Difference Meter is a professional instrument designed specifically for color difference comparison, distinct from a spectrophotometer. Equipped with a 4mm measuring aperture, it is suitable for analyzing small-area, flat, or curved samples, as well as small-particle products. It is ideal for color inspection of precision electronic components, small plastic parts, fine textiles, miniature hardware, small ceramic pieces, and fine printed materials—as well as small-particle color masterbatches, pigments, plastic granules, fine powders (colorants), small buttons, miniature accessories, and similar products or materials.
I. Measurement Characteristics
This device detects only the *relative* color difference between a sample and a standard reference; it outputs ΔL, Δa, Δb, and ΔE deviation values, allowing for an intuitive assessment of the magnitude and direction of any color shift. It does *not* measure absolute Lab color values.
II. Explanation of Lab Color Difference and Matching
– L (Lightness): ΔL+ indicates the sample is too bright (needs darkening); ΔL− indicates it is too dark (needs brightening).
– a (Red-Green Axis): Δa+ indicates a shift toward red; Δa− indicates a shift toward green.
– b (Yellow-Blue Axis): Δb+ indicates a shift toward yellow; Δb− indicates a shift toward blue.
– Total Color Difference (ΔE): The lower the value, the closer the color match; industry standards typically consider a ΔE < 1 to be acceptable.
III. Distinction from Spectrophotometers
– Color Difference Meter: Outputs *relative* color differences; offers rapid measurement speeds and high cost-effectiveness, making it suitable for daily factory color adjustments and batch quality inspections—particularly for the rapid testing of small-particle materials and precision miniature parts.
– Spectrophotometer: Capable of measuring *absolute* color values and establishing color libraries; typically utilized in R&D, high-end color matching, and the establishment of color standards.
In summary: A color difference meter assesses the magnitude and direction of color *deviations*, whereas a spectrophotometer defines the color *itself*.
IV. Support for Multiple Color Spaces
The device can simultaneously display color values across multiple spaces—including Lab, RGB, XYZ, LCh, Yxy, and LUV—thereby meeting the specific inspection standards required across diverse industries such as small-particle materials, precision electronics, and printing.
V. Color Matching Example
Standard Sample: L=80, a=5, b=10; Measured Sample: L=82, a=3, b=13
Color Difference: Lighter, greener, and yellower; Adjustment Strategy: Decrease lightness, increase redness, and decrease yellowness to meet the target specifications (Suitable for color matching various sample types, such as small-granule masterbatches and small plastic parts).
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