I have been told that this is just the regular season beam. The playoff beam and championship beam will be another level.Only 1800 watts? We could go so very much bigger, at least as far as electricity goes.
I have been told that this is just the regular season beam. The playoff beam and championship beam will be another level.
I could not see it from 80 and 65. I looked.
Also I used to be able to see the blue light building from the Elk Grove Blvd @ I5 over pass on occasion. So I assume you'd be able to see The Beam.
Appreciate your thoroughness and agree the purple color makes it very difficult to spot against the night sky, but you can definitely see it from 80.Ok, so I gotta share this.
After checking many times over the months, especially on the clearest visibility evenings, my wife and I finally decided to jump into one of our vehicles on Friday evening after the game to see how far we needed to drive to see “the BEAM”. (We usually attend a few games each season but haven’t this season yet)
We were quite disappointed with the result.
We drove I80 West and “thought” we might have an outside chance of spotting it by Citrus Heights and the Greenback or Madison exits. Nope.
We thought, for sure, we’d see it as we passed through Del Paso Heights on I80. Nope.
We then got to Truxel Blvd. in North Natomas and still couldn’t spot it, to our surprise and dismay.
We then took I5 South toward Downtown and still couldn’t see it at Richards Blvd.
It wasn’t until we were almost exiting the J Street exit that my wife says “now I see it”. I was driving and couldn’t fixate, but there it finally was. But very, very faint.
Even as we drove past it on J then again on L as we headed back to I5 — we were quite underwhelmed by the visibility of the “the BEAM”. It looks nothing like it does on TV. Clearly the camera picks up the light much, much better.
The experience surely explained why we couldn’t see it from where we live. There simply isn’t a chance to see it from 20 miles away. But from DPH and Natomas, and even on I5 approaching Downtown? I was quite surprised.
I think part of the issue is the color. Purple just doesn’t show up in the dark sky so easily. If it were bright red, green, or yellow - maybe it could be seen easier. IDK.
Don’t get us wrong, we love the concept of ”the BEAM”. And we’d both been curious to see it. And despite being disappointed by the reality of it, we still love it.
Still, I thought I’d share our experience with others in the area that might be wondering why they can’t see from where they live or might be interested in driving to where they think they should be able to see it.
Appreciate your thoroughness and agree the purple color makes it very difficult to spot against the night sky, but you can definitely see it from 80.
I don’t know what the area is called, but if you’re heading east, after the freeway splits, it goes high (over rivers I think?) twice…couldn’t see it over the first hump, but could the 2nd. Faint, but noticeable…observed Friday.
Ok, so I gotta share this.
After checking many times over the months, especially on the clearest visibility evenings, my wife and I finally decided to jump into one of our vehicles on Friday evening after the game to see how far we needed to drive to see “the BEAM”. (We usually attend a few games each season but haven’t this season yet)
We were quite disappointed with the result.
We drove I80 West and “thought” we might have an outside chance of spotting it by Citrus Heights and the Greenback or Madison exits. Nope.
We thought, for sure, we’d see it as we passed through Del Paso Heights on I80. Nope.
We then got to Truxel Blvd. in North Natomas and still couldn’t spot it, to our surprise and dismay.
We then took I5 South toward Downtown and still couldn’t see it at Richards Blvd.
It wasn’t until we were almost exiting the J Street exit that my wife says “now I see it”. I was driving and couldn’t fixate, but there it finally was. But very, very faint.
Even as we drove past it on J then again on L as we headed back to I5 — we were quite underwhelmed by the visibility of the “the BEAM”. It looks nothing like it does on TV. Clearly the camera picks up the light much, much better.
The experience surely explained why we couldn’t see it from where we live. There simply isn’t a chance to see it from 20 miles away. But from DPH and Natomas, and even on I5 approaching Downtown? I was quite surprised.
I think part of the issue is the color. Purple just doesn’t show up in the dark sky so easily. If it were bright red, green, or yellow - maybe it could be seen easier. IDK.
Don’t get us wrong, we love the concept of ”the BEAM”. And we’d both been curious to see it. And despite being disappointed by the reality of it, we still love it.
Still, I thought I’d share our experience with others in the area that might be wondering why they can’t see from where they live or might be interested in driving to where they think they should be able to see it.
Appreciate your thoroughness and agree the purple color makes it very difficult to spot against the night sky, but you can definitely see it from 80.
I don’t know what the area is called, but if you’re heading east, after the freeway splits, it goes high (over rivers I think?) twice…couldn’t see it over the first hump, but could the 2nd. Faint, but noticeable…observed Friday.
I thought Coach Brown indicated could see the beam from his El Dorado Hills home or maybe said it was when driving on Hwy 50 closer to the city.
I’m roughly a 15 minute drive from G1C and I can see the beam. Not perfectly clear or anything but you can still see the purple light in the sky!
Maybe current atmospheric conditions play a big part in distance visibility?I believe you, but it’s still a bit hard to understand or explain based upon what we witnessed on Friday night combined with what @midtowner had to say.
We were mere minutes away yet couldn’t see it until almost on top of it.
If Midtowner can hardly see it, if at all, from East SAC — that’s pretty telling.
Visibility is underwhelming to say the least.
Maybe current atmospheric conditions play a big part in distance visibility?
Only 1800 watts? We could go so very much bigger, at least as far as electricity goes.
I was wondering about this last night. Maybe there's a humidity level where the light has something to hit and refract, but its not cloudy enough to actually obscure vision?Maybe. IDK. But after the last storm, I figured visibility would be pretty decent.
Friday was a very clear day and evening.
I was wondering about this last night. Maybe there's a humidity level where the light has something to hit and refract, but its not cloudy enough to actually obscure vision?
Or maybe it has to do with the street lights of the city washing it out??
The conflicting experiences are certianly weird. I dont think anyone is lying about their experiance.
Im going to ask some friends of they can se it from their house
I may be wrong, but I do feel as if it would be more visible if the color of the lasers were bright red or green. Purple is our primary color, of course, but I think that color just washes out in the night sky.
But even if the color were more visible, I don’t believe it’d be visible from too far outside the immediate area anyway. It’s no Luxor in Vegas, that’s for sure.
Again, to be clear, the point of this isn’t to trash “the BEAM”. We still love the idea and what it represents. I just wanted to share with others that have also been curious why they haven’t been able to see it, if they live in the area but not within a few miles of Downtown.
They should juice it up and do the strongest beam legally possible.