Rasser
Active Member
In the thread Lighthouse Hydro is doing it wrong.
I wrote this:
So I've done some test and I feel that this deserve it's own thread,
and since the other thread already has plenty of info on cooling, modding, LEDs and heat.
Unboxing at work.
It's has turned very hot today, 3 days ago I was wearing long johns.
Great timing for the TempMod I've done on my unit.
I also measured the Sun PAR light output at lunchtime in clear sky and hot temps(82°F+) to be around 1700-1800 units(umol)
and at home around 16:00 I measured the sun again to be about 1500 and 1300 behind 6mm window glass.
So what will my LED lamp show...
Home - First test setup - Cold start !
Unit = 120W(90Watt actual draw) 112 LED's
Ambient light.
Lights One ! 457 umol and dropping quick.
Temperature +5 sec. 92.3°F
After 10 minutes. Temperature is up and due to the high temperature today
I'm running 100% power on the fans.
109.2°F
Ambient temperature:
Drums !
Output has dropped to 436 umol.
I feared it would be worse,,,
so if I was able to keep the plate at 33°c(91F) I would gain 30 unit, not much
considering how much cooling I would have to do to be running at that low temps,
adding some more light to compensate for output is properly making more sense.
( feel free to convert my numbers to % drop )
And a quick test on a 250W HPS(+30W ballast)
The HPS lamp is a bit higher up than the LED, so a real plant could grow there without getting on fire.
Not far from the LED output, and +200 if I close the door to enable more reflection.
BUT !
Reading the manual it's not that easy to compare the to types of lamps. The meter is calibrated to the sun,
and green light is counting too, and it looks like blue don't count as much as red and green.
And there is a small conversion table:
"Quantum light meters are calibrated for sunlight.
Due to differences in the spectrum generated by
artificial light, the following adjustments must be
made in the value shown on a sunlight-calibrated meter."
HPS 0% error vs. the sun = 1:1
CFL reads 8% to high vs. the sun = CFL*0.92= results to compare with the sun.
Metal Halide reads 8% to high = ----- // -----
NO LED conversion factor ! shit, But how could they make one anyway,
who knows what color LED are used.
So I'm a little bit disappointed with my new instruments sensitivity spectrum,
witch looks like this:
A snap from the manual.
"The Chart below displays the spectral response of the Quantum Light Meters."
But the meter is great to see how much light there is around the grow room, and like the
cold start test if you stay within the spectrum.
But using this meter HPS will properly beat LED every time.
And it's properly also the reason that this LumiLight test is using a very expensive spectrum analyzer
with individual bands displayed and not just a plain PAR meter.
Video of a 330W LumiGrow LED lamp vs. 400WMH and a 600W HPS:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DAw13w9eFxY&feature=related
Some screen shoots I captured and added some blue text to.
I think the big number in the overview section at the top is a total of PAR
and the 600W HPS is doing a double vs. the 330W LED, but if you look at
the individual bands where the plants likes it, the numbers are in the LED's favor.
There lamp don't do much UV so they totally ignore that band, off course.
Well the meter confirms my believes that a 120 Watt(actual) LED grow light can replace a 250W HPS
I wrote this:
And to my surprise my PAR Meter arrived a week before expected.I'm also looking forward to getting a PAR light meter, besides the obvious tests,
The Sun vs. HPS vs. LED and so on, it would be interesting to see how big a difference
there is in light output between a cold started unit and one that's been running for 30 minutes.
A standart lux meter may work for that test - anyone got one of those?
So I've done some test and I feel that this deserve it's own thread,
and since the other thread already has plenty of info on cooling, modding, LEDs and heat.
Unboxing at work.
It's has turned very hot today, 3 days ago I was wearing long johns.
Great timing for the TempMod I've done on my unit.
I also measured the Sun PAR light output at lunchtime in clear sky and hot temps(82°F+) to be around 1700-1800 units(umol)
and at home around 16:00 I measured the sun again to be about 1500 and 1300 behind 6mm window glass.
So what will my LED lamp show...
Home - First test setup - Cold start !
Unit = 120W(90Watt actual draw) 112 LED's
Ambient light.
Lights One ! 457 umol and dropping quick.
Temperature +5 sec. 92.3°F
After 10 minutes. Temperature is up and due to the high temperature today
I'm running 100% power on the fans.
109.2°F
Ambient temperature:
Drums !
Output has dropped to 436 umol.
I feared it would be worse,,,
so if I was able to keep the plate at 33°c(91F) I would gain 30 unit, not much
considering how much cooling I would have to do to be running at that low temps,
adding some more light to compensate for output is properly making more sense.
( feel free to convert my numbers to % drop )
And a quick test on a 250W HPS(+30W ballast)
The HPS lamp is a bit higher up than the LED, so a real plant could grow there without getting on fire.
Not far from the LED output, and +200 if I close the door to enable more reflection.
BUT !
Reading the manual it's not that easy to compare the to types of lamps. The meter is calibrated to the sun,
and green light is counting too, and it looks like blue don't count as much as red and green.
And there is a small conversion table:
"Quantum light meters are calibrated for sunlight.
Due to differences in the spectrum generated by
artificial light, the following adjustments must be
made in the value shown on a sunlight-calibrated meter."
HPS 0% error vs. the sun = 1:1
CFL reads 8% to high vs. the sun = CFL*0.92= results to compare with the sun.
Metal Halide reads 8% to high = ----- // -----
NO LED conversion factor ! shit, But how could they make one anyway,
who knows what color LED are used.
So I'm a little bit disappointed with my new instruments sensitivity spectrum,
witch looks like this:
A snap from the manual.
"The Chart below displays the spectral response of the Quantum Light Meters."
But the meter is great to see how much light there is around the grow room, and like the
cold start test if you stay within the spectrum.
But using this meter HPS will properly beat LED every time.
And it's properly also the reason that this LumiLight test is using a very expensive spectrum analyzer
with individual bands displayed and not just a plain PAR meter.
Video of a 330W LumiGrow LED lamp vs. 400WMH and a 600W HPS:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DAw13w9eFxY&feature=related
Some screen shoots I captured and added some blue text to.
I think the big number in the overview section at the top is a total of PAR
and the 600W HPS is doing a double vs. the 330W LED, but if you look at
the individual bands where the plants likes it, the numbers are in the LED's favor.
There lamp don't do much UV so they totally ignore that band, off course.
Well the meter confirms my believes that a 120 Watt(actual) LED grow light can replace a 250W HPS