CobKits
Well-Known Member
about 5-10 times longer than your CMH bulbonly because good led's havent been running for years n years how long will the cob last?
about 5-10 times longer than your CMH bulbonly because good led's havent been running for years n years how long will the cob last?
I'm sure I could make some space if you wanted, pay you after or send them backim at the limit of what i can do, i cant run 4 separate tests, nor do i have most chips in those colors.
Do you have the same data from. The ranges of 20-50W?they run right with the 72V vero D (vero calls them 68V i think) at 50W, and a hair above the 36V vero D
View attachment 3914347
That's what I thought.Dimming will provide better efficiency, but there's no difference between a 4 cob 150w lamp and a 4 cob 200w lamp dimmed to 150 watts.
better uMol/J is cobs 9/10times. Unless you run them hard. So that's why most prefer them. Pretty easy to get up to 2.2-2.5 if you have the coinSo it is a tight game between this two lights, but with a small advantage for the cob over the cmh, and personally I think I will take the cobs.
Thank u all for your time and your answers
yes but measurement becomes less accurate at lower currents, theres some scatterDo you have the same data from. The ranges of 20-50W?
i'm actually more interested in the 90CRI 3500k if possible..im doing some sphere work ill shoot one for you. i have 30/80 mounted, i have to get over my mounting issue to move faster with more tests. looks like im taking the grinder to the sphere to allow for full-size standard cooling options
What was the cri and spectrum of the cxm 22?yes but measurement becomes less accurate at lower currents, theres some scatter
i try not to put too much stock in measurements below 20W, tho the sphere should do better here. i think on the free air measurements thats just reflected ambient light, etc. i could stand in a slightly different place and alter the par meter just from the light bouncing off of me. in any case they all seem to converge below 25W so in general, cheaper cobs= better cobs if youre going to run them soft. certainly zero support to the legend that certain chips outperform all others at low currents
View attachment 3914964
maybe. i got some of these as samples, ill digi'm actually more interested in the 90CRI 3500k if possible..
btw do you happen to have a ModuLED Mega 13450-HBG with the connector set for sale maybe not on the site?
CRI is a measurement of how accurately a light source illuminates an object's true colors, the difference between 80 CRI & 90 CRI is basically how "wide" the spectrum is, how much of the visible light spectrum that the LED produces covers, usually the higher the CRI the more Red light is produced, its still not 100% clear if 90 CRI preforms better then 80 CRI with plants, but some interesting examples are making me lean towards 90 CRI, and i'd stay well away from 70, see "The Dawgs" thread: https://www.rollitup.org/t/dhp-presents-citizen-cob-1812-3500k-80cri-vs-1812-3500k-90-cri.932990/WHAT IS CRI? i was looking at a few different led's one sais 70 cri and one sais 80cri,, both come in 4000k or 3000k which should i get?
I'll do the tutorial on this one. Thanks!If anyone's interested i called up the lovely people at Luminus and asked if they could provide me with the CXM-22 3500K 90 CRI spectrum, they were happy to help and provided me with an SPD file that i converted into a spectrum graph in excel.
View attachment 3916176
I've studied this spectrum in comparison to the Citizen 3500K 90 CRI gen 6 and it actually looks better, i'm honestly surprised, it has the same amount of 455nm & 480nm but it peaks at 625nm while citizen peaks at 620nm, that make its 660nm output around 78% while the Citizen 660nm output is right on 70%.
Basically a better spectrum from what i can tell..
That's not entirely true, CRI (color rendering index ) show's how well a light can show colors of various objects (humans can see) through the light in comparison to how it looks in natural daylight, so natural daylight has a CRI of 100 , meaning you can see colors very well through it. It's more used for photography , it's not super important when it comes to growing canna as some of the best lights have a poor CRI. It's mostly important in photography and when you really need to see colors through the light.CRI is a measurement of how accurately a light source illuminates an object's true colors, the difference between 80 CRI & 90 CRI is basically how "wide" the spectrum is, how much of the visible light spectrum that the LED produces covers, usually the higher the CRI the more Red light is produced, its still not 100% clear if 90 CRI preforms better then 80 CRI with plants, but some interesting examples are making me lean towards 90 CRI, and i'd stay well away from 70, see "The Dawgs" thread: https://www.rollitup.org/t/dhp-presents-citizen-cob-1812-3500k-80cri-vs-1812-3500k-90-cri.932990/