The cree bulbs actually seem to work pretty well. I'd say t5s would be a better fit though. I guess it depends on your space requirement but those cree bulbs aren't cheap.
There was someone else on here who made a pretty big light using the cree bulbs from home depot. They also had good results.
I guess what bothers me about using them is that they emit light in all directions. Im betting the cree flood lights would work much better.
CaptainMorgan had a thread using them. There is a link to that thread in
my write-up which was inspired by his thread.
I started growing with T5HO. I felt they were hotter and didn't penetrate as well. New T5HO bulbs are 92lm/watt (from memory, maybe 96. I forget). They fall off quickly after usage due to lumen maintenance.
I don't know why lumens/watt doesn't translate perfectly into heat. I'd think watts not going to lumens would be heat. But, from my experience, CFL and T5HO run remarkably hotter than the Cree bulbs which are around 90lm/w with the rubber coating removed, and 100lm/w with the glass globe removed (use a GFI circuit to power them this way to avoid electrocution).
What I mean is: I can leave a plant touching a 9.5w (60w equiv) Cree bulb for an entire day and it won't burn. If I did that with a 15w (60w equiv) CFL the leaf would be burnt in 30-60 minutes. That's far more heat than the 30% lower efficiency. I don't know if it's generating more infrared. But, it doesn't correlate watt for watt the way I'd expect it to.
Regarding omnidirectional. T5HO and CFL are omni too. Their efficiency is reduced when placed in a reflector. I.e., reflecting the light causes less light to be emitted (even if it's more light reaching the desired location).
That's why Cree's PAR38s and BR19 (60w indoor flood) appear to be less efficient based upon the packaging's numbers. An onmi light like the Cree 19 would have similar numbers if is lumens were measured with the omni in a reflector.
The one thing that may make PAR38s more efficient is that they may be made with XTE diodes. The onmidirectional bulbs started with XTE, then went to XBD which is a step down. They're not bad, but not as good as XTE. I'm not sure if this was permanent or not because I'm still finding XTE models still in stock at Home Depot. (I don't spend much time differentiating because I don't think it matters much.). I don't know what the PAR38s use, but they could be XTE still.
I didn't feel T5HO penetrated as well. Also, being a flat panel it was harder to contour the lights to the canopy. The panel also blocked air circulation.
I think the big win with the LED lightbulbs is providing light from multiple angles. Bathing the plant with softer light creates more efficiency (IMO) than you can get from discriminating between diodes. In a 10x10 grow room this style of lighting would be too labor intensive. But, in a 4x4 tent it's doable. It's worth experimenting with. The worst thing that can happen is someone will end up with some spare LED bulbs they can use as supplemental lighting. That's always useful.