GrowLightResearch
Well-Known Member
OSRAM does not have a Duris 660nm deep red. They have a red/orange 623nm.osram
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OSRAM does not have a Duris 660nm deep red. They have a red/orange 623nm.osram
I do not want to open that can of worms. For me personally, I will only deal with PPFD and do not care about PPF at all. That spec is useless to me.Calculated from the SPD chart and data from the datasheet.
The osram chip is truly a red only phosphor chip with a wide peak around 650 nm.By far the F-Series and BXC Gen2 are the most efficient and lowest cost source of light.
I would like to see white strips with a high CRI so supplementing these cheap lower CRI LEDs with deep red is not necessary.
The reason I mentioned the HE red is becasue due to the lack of an inexpensive low power deep red (≈660nm) to combine with the inexpensive strips, a strip could use a 14¢ Luxeon 90 CRI in place of the 9¢ LM561C. Samsung does not have an LM561C with a 90 CRI.
The Luxeon 90 CRI does not have a CCT probably becasue it is too red off the chart on the low side. Only the Vero Decor and Luxeon Fresh Focus Red Meat are the only LEDs I know of that have a "white" LED with a very noticeable red tint.
liarOSRAM does not have a Duris 660nm deep red. They have a red/orange 523nm.
True. Those are the highest efficiency deep reds. I prefer the Olson SSL 150 of the Cree. In deep blue Cree is the best.I believe cree photo reds or osram hyper red will smoke red phosphor chips for electrical efficiency.
Does the color of this LED look orange or red?Read the datasheet.
the spd in the datasheet shows a 650 nm peak. regardless of the exact chromacity its a very nice fat band in red and with lots of overlap into 660nm and into far red 700nm+ which a red mono does not have.
From a photosynthetic point of view, everything past 670nm is quickly becoming useless (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photosynthetically_active_radiation), therefore I would not recommend this LED for our purpose.and into far red 700nm+ which a red mono does not have.
very true regards raw photosynthesis, but its also known that wavelengths in the 700 nm range have significant photomorphogenic effects. Phytochrome responses, shade avoidance, seed germination etc.From a photosynthetic point of view, everything past 670nm is quickly becoming useless (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photosynthetically_active_radiation), therefore I would not recommend this LED for our purpose.
I wish it was 650nm. I don't think the perception thing will fool the plants tough. Until then the solution to a flower LED maybe the Luxeon HE 90 CRI. It is 154 lm/W whereas the Samsung LM561 3000K 90 CRI is 130lm/W. 154lm/W is very good for a very red spectrum.Put the SPD and the spectral sensitivity curve of the human eye in one coordinate system and you'll probably see that both curves meet at 620
The OSRAM hyper red peaks at 660nm and Cree's photo red peaks at 650nm.should I supplement with 660 deep red monos, or with a wider band of red light
I wasn't even talking about cannabinoid levels ... look up phytochrome, far red shade response and seed germination for just a few effects. Also check out Emerson....Far red does nothing for photosynthesis. Photomorphogenics will affect the cannabinoid levels and that has nothing to do with photosynthesis. Unfortunately there is very little research published in this area regarding cannabis.
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Yes I am very familiar with those aspects of Fr. Old news. Very old news. The terpenoids, flavonoids, phenylpropanoids, and the other secondary metabolites are much more interesting aspects of phytochromes and .photomorphogenics.I wasn't even talking about cannabinoid levels ... look up phytochrome, far red shade response and seed germination for just a few effects.
photomorphogenic effects then far red LEDs.
This image may help explain the difference between a blue-red spectrum vs. white. And make a statement regarding far red. I'm an electrical engineer and do not know much about plant physiology. I believe cannabinoids fall in to the bottom half of this table. I see cannabinoids phenylpropanoids, flavonoids and terpenoids in medical cannabis articles. For example these are the key words in this paper.but its also known that wavelengths in the 700 nm range have significant photomorphogenic effects.