Kassiopeija
Well-Known Member
Hello fellows,
now that diode tech makes it possibly to basically fill the entire tent"sky" with thousands of small "suns" I wonder why it's still not possible to do away with the central hotspot, that, basically is the result of too much diodes converging at the center but relatively less at the sides. When, in fact, the sides/corners where -or are- always less illuminated, sometimes even just by half of luminosity...
Here are some crudely montaged sheets where I illustrate the median distance of light rays under a board setup in comparison to COBs (their technological forerunners, not wanting to promote them now, just to illustrate an example)
Side view:
Average light distances:
COBs to pot1: 8.25cm
COBs to pot2: 7.0cm
Board to pot1: 9.3cm
Board to pot2: 7.8cm
Distance increase from board to COB: 12.7%
Top view:
Well, it doesn't take much imagine that one can use 4 strong COBS and place them in such a way in a tent that this tent is illuminated out in an almost homogenous fashion, by just driving the COBs equally on the diagonals, until the grade of light reflection or overlapping reaches equal numbers.
One can't do this with boards.. but maybe strips? Wouldn't it be possible to construct a board/bar that simply has less diodes to the center, and a tad more to the outside? Because, we know that reflection also causes some losses (a cheap tent may loose up to 30% upon first hit)...
Example:
At the closer settings the spot in the middle is +207% [!!] more luminous than the side, and +395% [!!!] more than the corners.
Ironically a good Avenger-hood with a big spreader underneath is going to show better results than this above!
So basically technology did take a step back while trying to evolve and loose an ability, instead of mastering this problem - which it could.
Coming from a HID/outdoor growing history I'm well versed in the problems with different & unnatural lightlevels, yet now we can place diodes all over the place, but still the same old problems remain... unsolved... just cut out in the middle and repatch at the corners...
"Intelligent diode placement"... even in an open industrial fashion where many boards are connected to illuminate a huge canopy such an emphasis to open up the array would be helpfull in proper light distribution.
now that diode tech makes it possibly to basically fill the entire tent"sky" with thousands of small "suns" I wonder why it's still not possible to do away with the central hotspot, that, basically is the result of too much diodes converging at the center but relatively less at the sides. When, in fact, the sides/corners where -or are- always less illuminated, sometimes even just by half of luminosity...
Here are some crudely montaged sheets where I illustrate the median distance of light rays under a board setup in comparison to COBs (their technological forerunners, not wanting to promote them now, just to illustrate an example)
Side view:
Average light distances:
COBs to pot1: 8.25cm
COBs to pot2: 7.0cm
Board to pot1: 9.3cm
Board to pot2: 7.8cm
Distance increase from board to COB: 12.7%
Top view:
Well, it doesn't take much imagine that one can use 4 strong COBS and place them in such a way in a tent that this tent is illuminated out in an almost homogenous fashion, by just driving the COBs equally on the diagonals, until the grade of light reflection or overlapping reaches equal numbers.
One can't do this with boards.. but maybe strips? Wouldn't it be possible to construct a board/bar that simply has less diodes to the center, and a tad more to the outside? Because, we know that reflection also causes some losses (a cheap tent may loose up to 30% upon first hit)...
Example:
At the closer settings the spot in the middle is +207% [!!] more luminous than the side, and +395% [!!!] more than the corners.
Ironically a good Avenger-hood with a big spreader underneath is going to show better results than this above!
So basically technology did take a step back while trying to evolve and loose an ability, instead of mastering this problem - which it could.
Coming from a HID/outdoor growing history I'm well versed in the problems with different & unnatural lightlevels, yet now we can place diodes all over the place, but still the same old problems remain... unsolved... just cut out in the middle and repatch at the corners...
"Intelligent diode placement"... even in an open industrial fashion where many boards are connected to illuminate a huge canopy such an emphasis to open up the array would be helpfull in proper light distribution.