You dispute common logic
Lol, you are too funny. I didn't fake anything. I created one of your poor looking par maps because you insisted I use that shitty format. Those charts are completely useless and look like you drew them in paint anyway. But still I drew one to show what it would look like since you keep having trouble understanding such simple concepts.
Of course you could look at PPFD par maps of bar lights in real life situations killing COB and Board based fixtures over and over
Its really simple. Imagine how the light spreads. Take a flash light. Lift it up until it covers a certain area. Now take 4 flashlights and uniformly spread them over the same area. To cover the same area do you need to lift the flashlights to the same height? No of course not each flashlight only needs to cover one quarter of the surface and therefore needs to be lifted only half as high.
This is common knowledge. Why would you need a paint drawn "par map" for something that simple?
Seriously, just because you don't understand how Dialux works, nor know what an IES file is, doesn't mean the rest of us don't.
Dialux is sound, the IES files are real, and you simply do not understand the technology used to create those PAR maps. That is your issue, no-one else's.
Indeed, it is precisely because you don't know how to use the technology that you had to computer draw your own "PAR map" and try to pass it off as a Dialux simulation. The problem is, I know how to use the program, so I knew at once it was a fake. You were caught out and now you are in denial, trying to suggest Dialux and IES files do not exist and are therefore a "shitty format" or "completely useless".
Those PAR maps have been replicated in the real world with physical PAR mapping using a hand-held Apogee PAR meter, and are accurate to within 5%.
But even if you don't believe me, I will appeal to your sense of "logic" – how could a few strips of LEDs bunched closely together (I am talking about the physical spacing of the LEDS on the strips themselves) provide a more even coverage than double or triple the number of LEDs spaced evenly and further apart? There is no way strips of light can beat wall-to-wall LEDs spaced evenly across the entire roof of a grow tent or room. To argue otherwise is folly.
In this instance, logic favours my empirical evidence – not your opinion.