The new QB 648 Diablo from Horticulture Lighting Group

2com

Well-Known Member
The 648+ datasheet is completelywrong lol. That one shouldn't even be published lmao. It says 3500k we are using 4k lmao. I will have them send the correct one soon.
Does this mean that the SPD chart for the individual diablo qbs is wrong? With that blue spike that goes to the top of the graph? Anybody?

Thanks.
 

pulpoinspace

Well-Known Member
Does this mean that the SPD chart for the individual diablo qbs is wrong? With that blue spike that goes to the top of the graph? Anybody?

Thanks.
idk but i think it looks about right. it is mostly 4000k white diodes. the rspec boards are 3500k white thats why they have less blue.
 

wietefras

Well-Known Member
Lol yeah he knows how to fudge the numbers. But then they say: "Yield is na gonna be thure"

So yes, don't be fooled my manufacturers who sneakily try to increase their numbers knowing that there will be no yield coming from it. Especially by manufacturers who lament this practice by other manufacturers and then do it themselves!

That chart for Fluence is their greenhouse light though. So, also fake news. For indoor growing Fluence uses PhysioSpec Indoor™ spectrum and that is more properly red biased.
SPDC_PhysioSpec-Indoor.jpg

Still a tad too blue I would say, but much better.

Lumatek Zeus 600W Pro adds a lot more red to the compensate for the blue in the white base:
Zeus600WPro_SpectrumGraph-v2.png
 

end_of_the_tunnel

Well-Known Member
Lol yeah he knows how to fudge the numbers. But then they say: "Yield is na gonna be thure"

So yes, don't be fooled my manufacturers who sneakily try to increase their numbers knowing that there will be no yield coming from it. Especially by manufacturers who lament this practice by other manufacturers and then do it themselves!

That chart for Fluence is their greenhouse light though. So, also fake news. For indoor growing Fluence uses PhysioSpec Indoor™ spectrum and that is more properly red biased.
View attachment 4603774

Still a tad too blue I would say, but much better.

..........
The ones I posted above were from 3rd party reports. With exception of SANLIGHT. Yours are derived from promotional literature, that could be outdated or superseded by component change.

I guess anything is possible, but don't think a professional laboratory would want their name associated with spurious or inaccurate results.

Don't even mention Lumatek, until they publish reputable third party lab report. Simply not in same league of manufacturer.

HLG is damned if they do, and damned if they don't. Can't please everyone all the time. Maybe the Diablo is partly aimed at appealing to the commercial market, where paper numbers appeal?

I can post the other Fluence bar light result from the same third party source. Current offerings from them in fanboy bar light form factor are 2p spectrum, and 2i spectrum. And those are exactly what Growers House got test reports for. Current and available product. WYSIWYG.

SPYDR 2i.pngSPYDR 2p.png

As you can see 2p is in fact the warmer of the two. Hence the reason I placed in post #304
 

2com

Well-Known Member
HLG Stephen talks a little about how competitors push the µmol/j numbers up by using higher Kelvin cct in their products. Around the 1 hour mark.

View attachment 4603565
View attachment 4603568
View attachment 4603571
View attachment 4603576

For contrast we could look at this masterpiece by SANLIGHT. I wonder what their µmol/j figure is?
View attachment 4603578
Thanks.
If you compare the relative intensity of the hlg 650r light lab test spd chart (that you just shared) to the spd chart on the hlg website the blue peak is much higher. Looks like "7.5" on the light lab, versus "9.8" on the hlg site.

Am I missing something? I thought what I just heard from Stephen is that the spd chart on the hlg website is completely wrong...
So is it? And is the lighting lab inc. test you just shared correct then?
That would make a pretty big difference...

Thanks anyone.
 

Piper84

Well-Known Member
My question is who came up with “white light” is full spectrum? It’s great for human eyes but not best for plant growth
 

wietefras

Well-Known Member
The ones I posted above were from 3rd party reports. With exception of SANLIGHT. Yours are derived from promotional literature, that could be outdated or superseded by component change.
Could be, however Fluence specifically mention different SPD
's and the one posted matches exactly with their greenhouse report and not the PhysioSpec one.

Either way, it's not so much relevant if is also among the photon number inflaters. The beauty of that interview is that it's clear why there is so much blue in the spectrum and that people should not buy those lights because it's abundantly clear that it's nothing but a marketing ploy.
 

wietefras

Well-Known Member
My question is who came up with “white light” is full spectrum? It’s great for human eyes but not best for plant growth
Actually "full spectrum" is term made up when led light manufacturers were using only red and blue leds. Some manufacturers started adding other wavelengths to fill up the gap between blue and red (sometimes also adding UV and infrared) and called their lights full spectrum.

Calling white led light "full spectrum" really isn't very common. Where did you see that?
 

Piper84

Well-Known Member
Actually "full spectrum" is term made up when led light manufacturers were using only red and blue leds. Some manufacturers started adding other wavelengths to fill up the gap between blue and red (sometimes also adding UV and infrared) and called their lights full spectrum.

Calling white led light "full spectrum" really isn't very common. Where did you see that?
See above quoted from op
 

end_of_the_tunnel

Well-Known Member
This is from op of this thread very first post
Keyword trigger for me is "efficiency". What else could a manufacturer do? Have to cater for the efficiency snobs. Seems many were happy with Rspec. Logical to offer options for all comers. Thens theres the ones not satisfied. Plenty of choice out there.
 

pulpoinspace

Well-Known Member
Thanks.
If you compare the relative intensity of the hlg 650r light lab test spd chart (that you just shared) to the spd chart on the hlg website the blue peak is much higher. Looks like "7.5" on the light lab, versus "9.8" on the hlg site.

Am I missing something? I thought what I just heard from Stephen is that the spd chart on the hlg website is completely wrong...
So is it? And is the lighting lab inc. test you just shared correct then?
That would make a pretty big difference...

Thanks anyone.
one has relative intensity on the Y axis and the other has normalized power
 
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X6xsilverx6X

Well-Known Member
Thanks.
If you compare the relative intensity of the hlg 650r light lab test spd chart (that you just shared) to the spd chart on the hlg website the blue peak is much higher. Looks like "7.5" on the light lab, versus "9.8" on the hlg site.

Am I missing something? I thought what I just heard from Stephen is that the spd chart on the hlg website is completely wrong...
So is it? And is the lighting lab inc. test you just shared correct then?
That would make a pretty big difference...

Thanks anyone.
Could be that the chart on the website the one supplied by Samsung? Which is why it could be wrong... remember what they did with the data sheet. Either way I didn’t catch that until after you mentioned it
 

2com

Well-Known Member
one has relative intensity on the Y axis and the other has normalized power
Ah, I didn't notice that. I don't know what the difference is though either, hah.
I'd wanna know if that spd on the left is correct. And I guess I'll see if I can find out what "normalized power" is.

1592935784889.png1592935864327.png
 

2com

Well-Known Member
Could be that the chart on the website the one supplied by Samsung? Which is why it could be wrong... remember what they did with the data sheet. Either way I didn’t catch that until after you mentioned it
Could be I'm wrong - as someone just pointed out that the graphs are actually 'different'. I didn't catch anything then I guess, I thought that's what was being referenced when Stephen said the datasheet was wrong. But I duno now.
 

pulpoinspace

Well-Known Member
Ah, I didn't notice that. I don't know what the difference is though either, hah.
I'd wanna know if that spd on the left is correct. And I guess I'll see if I can find out what "normalized power" is.

View attachment 4604025View attachment 4604028
i was reading a thread on this exact topic the other day is why i noticed. i have no idea how to find that thread. might even be this one. but someone will shed light on this in a minute haha.
 
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