I'd like to see your results for sure. Simply because the results of the cobs is goooooood in real grows on real plants. This all makes me want to do a grow with red only blue only why're only and green only with clones. Would be interesting to see results. Hasn't this been done???Also id like to see some .ies files from various lighting manufacturers.
Goniophotometer testing is very important to show real world results.
Think of sphere data as a dyno. You've got the horsepower now you need to put it to the ground. We will openly provide the ies files of the maximizer as well.
As they say in the racing world don't build a dyno queen..... Transversly don't build a sphere queen either.
TMP could be temp inside the sphere with a light cookin at steady state for awhile. if so 150F ambient is really high and would affect the flux for sure. i think the line between blue and green range is somewhat arbitrary - look how high the green is
ill eat crow
Maybe you didn't get the memo?...... don't want you in here and I like the taste of crow!so what youre saying is..... the manufacturers calculators are actually useful tools for predicting chip performance.
Definitely not trying to rake you over the coals on this. Getting sphere data in any form is great. I would really like to have all the variables to further my knowledge as well.Listen fellas not trying to start some stupid war , just wanted ANY info on the very popular cxb line........ can't ask for multiple chips & mah readings, dozens of reflector / optics work on volunteer time..... sorry, someone else has to pony up.
I'm on the road and have other issues to worry about........ hopefully I can get some more answers after the weekend on the specific test parameters.
View attachment 3805527 ...... this is what happens when you plant too far from each other with incompetent off-season pruning and mother nature "blows on your balls"....... fuck
Robin is always on point without acting like a pompous know it all........... thanks for the time brother, I appreciate the help....we're getting more sphere testing soon supposedly, will see on accuracy..... thanks
Maybe you didn't get the memo?...... don't want you in here and I like the taste of crow!
I find it so odd that sphere data for this fixture can vary so wildly. Cree put a 1000W gavita Pro in their sphere (for the Horticulture Reference Design) and arrived at 1.72 PPF/Wgavita pro 1000w de did 1.5ppf/w in his sphere, slightly used(less than dozen fires)
Actually, stardustsailor took thirty Bridgelux Vero 29's to a sphere owned by a University and the measurements matched the datasheets very closely. I think someone actually also put a few Cree COBs on a sphere, but I can't find that back so I could be wrong.First ever COB sphere data in this forum
Cool that you got all this data.
I guess the data actually quite closely matches the datasheet. It's just hard to see where on the datasheet to look since several parameters are not clear.
For instance, the data doesn't mention the Tc or Tj which would actually be quite important. It only mentions TMP(Deg) which is 150 (assuming Fahrenheit so 65C). That would probably be the ambient temperature in the sphere and then the COBs inside the fixture would be running much hotter. I've seen these pin coolers run at 50C above ambient. So that could mean a Tc of 115C. That would put the CXB3590 CD bin @1.4A on an efficacy of around 136lm/W according to the datasheet.
Although it's probably a combination of high Tc (say 85C) and the driver efficiency of 93%. That combination also gives you 136lm/W for the system according to the datasheet for the CD bin.
View attachment 3806130
I find it so odd that sphere data for this fixture can vary so wildly. Cree put a 1000W gavita Pro in their sphere (for the Horticulture Reference Design) and arrived at 1.72 PPF/W
There are also these measurements which put the Gavita around that 1.72 mark as well (both also include driver losses):
View attachment 3806101
In response to the Cree HortiCulti reference design, Gavita stated that putting a fixture inside a sphere is a bad idea. Makes sense since then much more light could get absorbed by the fixture. Flat plane integration would be better. Or at least mount it on the outside of the sphere shining in.
On the other hand, Cree also had the fixture inside their sphere and they arrived at 1.72PPF/W
Actually, stardustsailor took thirty Bridgelux Vero 29's to a sphere owned by a University and the measurements matched the datasheets very closely. I think someone actually also put a few Cree COBs on a sphere, but I can't find that back so I could be wrong.
OMG , never saw that!.............your right, thanks for pointing that out.............SDS was ahead of his time and we all still miss him.@PSUAGRO, Yeah that's another point against reflectors. Still, 1.5 vs 1.7 seems a big difference just for possibly a bit of dirt on the reflector.
Gavita disagrees with that test because it doesn't match what they measure in actual applications. They have software which calculates light distribution based on number of fixtures and placement of the fixtures. That matches what they actually measure after the lights are installed. So they would know how much light is actually arriving at the plants and how much is coming from the fixtures.
Anyway, it was more an observation that you'd expect spheres to give definitive results but that apparently even those measurements can differ by 13%. Plus that perhaps methodology could be responsible for some of the difference.
Hmm can't find the SDS post with sphere results, but here is one where he refers to doing the sphere test:
http://rollitup.org/t/optic-lighting-vero-cobs-updated.860452/page-4#post-11330529
pretty cool to read through that thread,thanks@PSUAGRO, Yeah that's another point against reflectors. Still, 1.5 vs 1.7 seems a big difference just for possibly a bit of dirt on the reflector.
Gavita disagrees with that test because it doesn't match what they measure in actual applications. They have software which calculates light distribution based on number of fixtures and placement of the fixtures. That matches what they actually measure after the lights are installed. So they would know how much light is actually arriving at the plants and how much is coming from the fixtures.
Anyway, it was more an observation that you'd expect spheres to give definitive results but that apparently even those measurements can differ by 13%. Plus that perhaps methodology could be responsible for some of the difference.
Hmm can't find the SDS post with sphere results, but here is one where he refers to doing the sphere test:
http://rollitup.org/t/optic-lighting-vero-cobs-updated.860452/page-4#post-11330529
It is a very good read...........man I have a shitty memory, even liked those SDS sphere posts back then,lolpretty cool to read through that thread,thanks
he pops in every once in awhile.......... living the clean life now , no cigs, alcohol, sugar,salt,meat===planning on wife,house,family? last I heardIs SDS still around?