what is the greeners testDude. Google is your friend. Large hoods are fucking stupid. Especially the really long ones. Do you have some magical 30" long hps bulb to utilize a 3' long hood?
Look at the greeners test. Those big ass hoods scored below the others
Agreed, I would say anything that's batwing that's not well-overblown should work decently for most... you don't need a reflector that's capable of throwing light 18ft across the room, given the laws surrounding it.Dude. Google is your friend. Large hoods are fucking stupid. Especially the really long ones. Do you have some magical 30" long hps bulb to utilize a 3' long hood?
Look at the greeners test. Those big ass hoods scored below the others
http://www.greners.com/reflector-test.htmlwhat is the greeners test
okay?? be a jackass over nothing..Yeah great point...because a measure of par spread would having nothing to do with the spread of lumens?? Did you actually think before posting, or just impulsively dismiss their test because it didn't jive with your understanding?
And just a an FYI so you don't seem so stupid in the future, lumens or lux are the same thing as foot candles, one is just referenced to an area.
Efficiency makes more sense, because there is too much variables between different bulbs to give any real world numbers. Efficiency makes more sense, because it isolates only the efficiency of the reflector. I'm currently running a 400w CMH in a Blockbuster reflector. If they gave some fort of lumen number for HPS, it would be meaningless to my situation.okay?? be a jackass over nothing..
my point being they dont show any results other than the "efficiency" number that they give.
what does this mean to me. maybe the difference in real numbers is minimal. maybe its big enough that i would want to switch.
but why would I want to make a decision without the actual readings.