ok kirk lol
ill semd some photon misssles yor way
really your best response
use a lumen meter to check your lites output,or to take pics
educate urself before spreadingt intenet bullshit lol
ive won this fight more than once lol
For sure you are right up to a point, technically we could just consider Par as two thin spikes on a spectrum graph at 400 and 700 to which youll get no argument back.
Truthfully and more to the point Par is a very complex subject, consider the experimemts which show that even the wrong kind of Par can grow a plant as quantity far out weighs quality when talking about photons. Even then most grow lights are attenuated more towards the photosynthetic portion of light and as such are not a far cry from the true amount of photosynthetic light available.
I dont see many wanting to move forwards with Par as Lumens is a reasonable consideration.
As youve cited Par i wonder just how much you use it in your daily grow (or is it just a talking point)? For sure Par is an easy subject but to accuratly measure and put into practice its a lot more technical mathmatically, unless you can afford a high range par meter.
Par involvels your daily light integral and gives you an average umol/s or average mol needed per stage of plant, light and distance. It sets when to begin your dark period and such in pro greenhouses.
Im happy to talk in terms of par since you like that, seedlings like 2-5mols a day veg at 6-10 mols a day.
Youmight find that lumens is a lot easier plus most lights are shifted towards the Par part of the spectrum where photons have more energy due to longer wavelengths so going futher can be a bit of a chore.