Found this thread doing a google search...
http://www.saberforum.com/index.php?PHPSESSID=278lmcmb4rab1k3r1mfvb6fdd4&topic=37764.0(disclaimer, I won't be trying these out myself until my sabers arrive... but in the meantime...)
I notice that W values are missing... not sure what mixing extra W will do, but I'm guessing you'll get a brighter but more pastel look.
ktulu1347 wrote:
Diamond Express Wizard Blade Color palette
Row 1 (These are obvious)
Blazing Red - R255
Guardian Blue - B255
Consular Green - G255
Adegan Silver - W255
Row 2 (Red-Blue combinations)
Bane's Heart - R255 B25
Violet Amethyst - R75 B255
Dark Violet Amethyst - R50 B255
Hot Pink - R255 B255
Row 3 (Blue-Green combinations)
Arctic Blue - G255 B255
Sunrider's Destiny - G255 B20
Emerald Green - G255 B10
unnamed color(Sky Blue?) - G55 B255
Row 4 (Red-Green combinations)
Sentinel Yellow - R175 G255
Fire Orange - R255 G150
Pyrestone Orange - R255 G30
unnamed color(Lime/Toxic Green?) - R50 G255
Addendum from ktulu1347 in the next post:Bane's Heart is R255 B16 instead of R255 B25
Dark Violet Amethyst is R40 B255 instead of R50 B255
Hot Pink - R255 B75
Additionally, this site, on adding white:https://blog.athrunen.dev/experimenting-with-efficiently-combining-rgb-and-true-white/ConclusionUsing the white LED when mixing desaturated colors is fairly easy and can be achieved by just simply replacing all or some of the amount of white created by the third color with actual white.
The more desaturated the color is, the more are we able to reap the benefits of the wider color spectrum. The problem is, that on full saturations we have no white at all.
But I can think of at least two ways to increase the quality even in that case:
Using more than three spectral colors(tetra-, pentachromatic LEDs)
Always adding some tiny amount of white(and maybe increase the resolution from 8-bit(256 steps) to 16-bit(65536 steps))
And as I am already working on implementing the aforementioned 16-bit RGB resolution I might be able to try the last one out for myself.