Areas are very close per watt. I believe the CLW are just a couple watts per sqft more I can't remember and don't feel like calculating at the moment.:: pulls up chair ::
blurple is no joke- esp these HQ osrams
Q for @BM9AGS:
are the areas the same? if so, wouldnt dimming the clw to 800W total with a kill-a-watt (or whatever the cree rig pulls from the wall w/drivers) be more fair?
also whats with the extra lights in the cree zone?
3500k 80criNice one for specs on the CLW spectrum, makes my decision much easier...
Personally I think if BM9AGS is running all 3 bands on the CLW vs the 3590 then my money (for now) is on the 3590 for higher gpw and better quality product.
@BM9AGS what's the Colour temp and CRI of those 3590's?
Is this what the CLW spectrum looks like when you are running all 3 bands?Take note everyone. The CLW is white, blue and red. Not really a burple. Even tho pics scream burple
Cheers do you have a graph to hand that shows the spectral output of CXB 3500k 80CRI... Tried searching for it and this was the best I could come up with don't suppose you know whether this is accurate?3500k 80cri
Put it this way if both of the grow spaces are equal sized and the only difference is wattage consumed in each space, then let's say yield was exactly the same in each space then it would show how COB tech using 57ish% less energy than the CLW can effectively keep up and produce the same yield... e.g COB is superior.To be an even match they both should be 800w or 1200w..This battle is a little biased in that respect.. But i will still put my quality vote for the cobs.. Osram does make a quality product for sure.. No doubt about it.. But i still vote cobs.. This is awesome to watch..
or it could demonstrate the law of diminishing returns for wattage in a spacePut it this way if both of the grow spaces are equal sized and the only difference is wattage consumed in each space, then let's say yield was exactly the same in each space then it would show how COB tech using 57ish% less energy than the CLW can effectively keep up and produce the same yield... e.g COB is superior.
Blue and red... this is chinese spectrum, lol. I kid, I am sorry, but I can't coupe? with against nature thing. Man the only time the sun will have that spectrum is at the end of this world, probably, give ot take sone UV-B, UV-C )
or it could demonstrate the law of diminishing returns for wattage in a space
I was unsure of size, hence I asked the question below for confirmation lol, but it seems I missed the above but from the looks of things the CLW grow is in a larger area, which will negate law of diminishing returns if you ponder on it.he never said the spaces were the same size, he said watts per sq ft were the same approximate density
@BM9AGS Just want to confirm are both of the test grow areas exactly the same size, with the only difference being amount of wattage used in each area, i.e 800 watts in one space and 1200 watts in the other?
CLW is covering the company recommended 4'x8' grow area for 3 lights.Not really if CLW test growspace is 50% larger then it would only be using 7% more radiant watts across it's total area which, you would think is kinda negligible. I bet if you increased COB output by 7% (depending on his current PPFD) you would more than likely see an increase in yield and possibly quality.
My thoughts at this stage are, the Blurpleish spectrum is inferior to the COB spectrum.
I don't believe it is about law of diminishing returns, hopefully BM9AGS will come back soon and give us the size of each area
I was unsure of size, hence I asked the question below for confirmation lol, but it seems I missed the above but from the looks of things the CLW grow is in a larger area, which will negate law of diminishing returns if you ponder on it.
CLW is a full spectrum light. It's white based with 450 and 660 added.If the same cuts are being grown under both, i bet they will look very different because the CLW isn't a full spectrum light like the timber COB framework is.
Grams per watt should be as un biased as I can make it......not like I wanna turn off 1 light just to make it watt per watt. Then the sqft wouldn't be the same. Gpw will show which is best for sure.To be an even match they both should be 800w or 1200w..This battle is a little biased in that respect.. But i will still put my quality vote for the cobs.. Osram does make a quality product for sure.. No doubt about it.. But i still vote cobs.. This is awesome to watch..
Cool.Grams per watt should be as un biased as I can make it......not like I wanna turn off 1 light just to make it watt per watt. Then the sqft wouldn't be the same. Gpw will show which is best for sure.