This graph shows the light output per watt as the wattage increases you can see the light per watt drops. So at 60 watts with a gen 4 chip I get a little over 32 lumens per watt but cranked to 100 watts I only get 29.5 per watt.
View attachment 4373248
So more cobs costs more to build but runs more efficient.
that Y axis isnt a calibrated as PAR or lumens, FYI. its really only for comparative purposes
so you can compare curves within a given test, but if you see another test by me it is not comparable. there are lot of variables (temp, did i use the same sensor, etc). I just use it to compare relative performance of given chips. my first tests were all against CXB3590 which quickly got ditched for the better options (citizen then luminus)
vero is good but i never know what people are talking about when trying to compare. B, C and D are totally different chips that happen to share a form factor. in the 50-80W range that we like to use, the gen3 luminus are about equal to vero C, and above B and D
gen4 is an impressive chip and should beat vero C handily, ive been trying to get my hands on some newer vero C to see if they are performign better than the ones i have from a year or two ago. same part number but they might have increased efficacy now