ceestyle
Well-Known Member
ok.. it's that time of year. most children around here are back in school.
ceestyle's experiment is some good proof that lumens do add, but I have also seen a forum regular post contradicting proof. 2 bulbs next to each other with a tester held in the middle. not very accurate and quickly done, but still enough to keep the question up in the air. do lumens add? we need irrefutable proof. one experiment proving it is a good start, but we need beyond a shadow of a doubt to put it to rest. btw, most threads and posts are just other people giving their opinion, and that doesn't have any weight at all on what is fact.
It's not just one experiment. Look at the 16K lumen thead. You can tell from the intensity map that lumens do add. Otherwise the light intensity would be flat across the middle where all the bulbs are, but it's not.
I'm sorry that noone seems to accept the word of science here, but Al B. Fuct's experiment was obviously flawed.
Think about it - you're telling me that if you have 1 x 1000W HID, it's going to give you more light than 9 x 600W HIDs sitting next to each other? It's a really easy thought experiment.
I'm out. This is a serious waste of my time and energy.