So basically there's no practical means to find out whether certain paint is true UV or fluorescent? Fluorescent colors on the other hand are still very effective but could only be verified for fluorescence using my UV flashlight, correct? I'm starting to get confused between fluorescent, UV and glow-in-the-dark phosphorus based paints.
Also what would it be a good place to buy some UV, fluorescent or glow-in-dark paints, maybe a craft store? Michael's didn't have any "special" selection last time I checked it was just generic basic colors.
Yeah, the terms can get confusing and the manufacturers don't help by mixing up the terminology.
UV-reflective: like a mirror, it reflects any UV light that hits it. No UV light, no reflectance.
UV-fluorescent: like my Jimi Hendrix poster under black light, when UV light hits it, it absorbs the UV light and re-emits it (fluorescence) at a different wavelength, often in the visible wavelengths so we can see it. When there is no UV light shining on it, there is no fluorescence.
Glow in the dark: like my old Green Ghost game, the material absorbs light (not just UV) and over time, slowly re-emits it (phosphorescence) at the same or different wavelengths. If you take the light away, it still glows in the dark for a while.
I suspect most of the lures being sold as UV lures are actually UV-fluorescent as that article mentions. Interesting that polished aluminum has very high UV reflectance, much higher than nickel which most spoons seem to be made of. Maybe polished aluminum spoons would be more effective under low light conditions (turbid water, deep troll).
Pro-tec UV paints can apparently be bought from Cabelas on-line.