Rocket Soul
Well-Known Member
After lurking and reading on the forum for somewhile back i was so happy to find theses bin comp threads with real measured data. I was starting to doubt some of the spreadsheet maths people use when i saw the readings people got from one of the optic/reflector threads (https://www.rollitup.org/t/lens-and-reflector-optics-for-cob.893660/), result just didnt make sense with regards to some calculations ive seen based on the spreadshhets. So real measured data was like yes finally! Hats off to supra and robin cnn and everyone else with the will and equipment to do this. But the graph that supra put up on the first bin comp thread got me thinking in the end: consistently higher ppfd/watt@x-current the higher K the spectrum was, comparing the same model for example the cxb3590. Now that doesnt make no sense to me. Please dont take this as knowitall-ism, i know very well im not as versed in the math nor the science in all this but there is something fishy in this: we know that blue light is higher in energy/photon, meaning that for 1 watt of light, the more red the more photons, although each with less energy. If we are measuring this correctly, and the conversion bit based upon the apogee not reading all the red photons, shouldnt it be the other way around? Ok, so the bluer cobs have higher bin, and higher lumen. But all the wattages is the same for every measurement so shouldnt blue come out losing in ppfd/watt@x-current? The differnce between 1 watt of blue and 1 watt of red or far red was stated around 50ish % more photons in the red spectrum. I mean this is the whole reasoning for reder lights for growing as photosynthesis is driven by amount of photons? Not sure if im clear enough, but theres something that doesnt make sense with those graphs. Not sure if its in the maths(dont think so, supra knows his shit), in the apogee readings (how do they work anyway, they actually count photons? Or aproximate how many based on the watts of radiant energy they recieve and compare it to which color? Anyone knows?) or maybe the conversion factor (most likely?). Please, anyone has an idea?