The 5600K BD has a remarkably high CRI. 5600K is the CCT of sunlight at midday in summer. Since you would have the same CCT as sunlight, and almost the same CRI (as close as possible), wouldn't you pretty much have electric sunlight?
CCT ==/== SPECTRUM for godsake5700 is the CCT of midday sunlight so probably the best of the three. You can also probably get good bins because it's an unusual CCT so not that popular.
Well i am going with 6500k and 3500 k mixed i think that will indeed be overall best when comparing it to actual sun Bob one must remember plants can only utiilize 10 percent of mid day light so why on god earth would a person want to run light only mid day ??5700 is the CCT of midday sunlight so probably the best of the three. You can also probably get good bins because it's an unusual CCT so not that popular.
lol in your eyes its not efficient by what standard ??CCT ==/== SPECTRUM for godsake
Enough of this sunlight BS. Reproducing sunlight is HIGHLY INEFFICIENT.
Only reason sunlight works (in part) well, is that sunlight is free ... A 56% efficient cob with mid day spectrum would have LOW PPF/W
Well over 50% of the sun output isn't even in the PAR range ... so a 56% efficient 'sunlight cob' would have something like 25 PAR W for 100W used at best, probably much less actually ...
lol in your eyes its not efficient by what standard ??
If you regard purely the thermal efficiency, yes, it will radiate close to 100% of the energy from nuclear reactions outwards in the form of electromagnetic radiation, ions, nucleons, and neutrinos which will heat up or ionize something else in some way.
A more interesting question is whether it is efficient at maximizing binding energy towards the iron/nickel elemental distributions towards the end of its life span. Take the sun; it is predicted that most nuclei would fuse into carbon at the end of its lifetime, but not further into "shell-burning" oxygen, neon, potassium, titanium, chromium, or iron as do most supergiants.
Then the ultimate question is mass-energy equivalence; the sun loses several million tons of matter per second as a result of this, but ultimately that represents a tiny fraction of its overall mass even by the end of its lifetime.
Who said anything about creating all the IR associated with black body radiation?Enough of this sunlight BS. Reproducing sunlight is HIGHLY INEFFICIENT.
Well over 50% of the sun output isn't even in the PAR range ... so a 56% efficient 'sunlight cob' would have something like 25 PAR W for 100W used at best, probably much less actually ...
Got any proof for that? There is a solid debate on this topic in the side by side section over on icmag. The debate is mostly about mh vs hps in flower but the mh guys are making big buds and say it has more to do with genetics.@cdgmoney250 : Ok, that sounds fair ... But even then the very cool blue:red ratio outdoors is not optimal for for 2 reasons (1st point isn't so much for veg but ..)):
- More leafy buds because of so much blue, redder orangy spectrums induce more bud:leaf production.
- Blue photons are much more 'expensive' energywise than red photons to produce. Photosynthesis cares about photons it can catch, not how much energy they have when they are caught. Therefore it is preferable to have as little blue as necessary, and as much orange/red as usable adequately, while keeping it all balanced enough for our plants to be happy.
@hillbill : Obviously we're talking about what actually reaches our plants in our gardens ..