Hobbes, not sure about the light you mentioned, you want sub 320nm.
Does anyone know why UVA isn't possibly helping this effect? Why are we specifically after just UVB?
If UV really works, I could always look at how much some customized & fit to the task bulbs might be.
For intensity, nothing is going to beat the HID low pressure mercury bulbs. Stealthy mentioned using a double ended bulb, that could be similar.
A standard reptile fluoro will give around 3w for the whole bulb (30w in), a medical UVB will be around 11w UVB for 100W of input. The Osram Ultra-Vitalux is about 3W out for 300W in. The MegaRay will be similar I'd guess.
To get sunlight intensity over a large area at anything other than right up close or way too focused is going to need a high UVB out wattage.
It would then be a matter of finding a HID that can pour it out and that's cheaper to buy than the fluoros. I'll investigate (edit: done). Osram do a lot of HID bulbs (supratec) with UVB outputs in tens of watts. Wish more of it was going into UVB instead of UVA.
http://www.osram.com/_global/pdf/Professional/General_Lighting/UV_IR/105S003GB_DB_Supratec_UV.pdf
Here are the rough prices for Osram's Supratec line;
HSC 400-221 460 W (90W UVA
22w UVB) = ~40 Euros
HTC 400-221 460 W R7s (95W UVA 25W UVB) = ~25 Euros (looking good, the other higher wattage HTC bulbs may be good as well, they're cheaper than the HSC because they have an electrode on either end of the bulb which isn't an issue for us, may be better to have a couple of the lower wattages spread out)
HSC 500-221 570 W GY9,5 (110W UVA
28W UVB) = ~60 Euros
HSC 1000-221 1000 W (210W UVA
40W UVB) = ~80 Euros
These are used for curing plastics and adhesives and come with a special warning that they're only to be used in enclosed spaces - they're industrial lamps.
I've been doing a lot of searching, but only Osram have published some UVB wattage figures for HID so far. The others seem to focus on UVA (tanning) and UVC (disinfection). Some help finding other HID manufacturers that give their bulbs UVB figures would be useful.