nevergoodenuf
Well-Known Member
I prefer a simpler build when possible.
There are quite a lot of UV or near UV LEDs. But the price is always ridiculous, I haven't been able to find an affordable one which would be somewhat efficient.LUXEON Z UV
LHUV-0425-0600
430nm 46% efficient
http://www2.mouser.com/ProductDetail/Lumileds/LHUV-0425-0600/?qs=/ha2pyFadugj5qMGsP6eflE2DM/BR8QH/lhPRPr87m1ixCll%2bc52pqz1W%2bGUBxGN
Price: LoL²
that's true (unless you throw some royal blues in like me) but its not a fair comparison, because the underrun CXB will not supply the amount of deep red desired. no matter what you do the higher wavelengths are more inefficient, whether its cobs or monos.most monos, seem to be less efficient than underun CXB's ..
isn't the diode used for white phosphor leds a royal blue ?Using the numbers given without looking into more detail I get ;
1st) 0.75/(3.5*0.7) = 30.6%
2nd) 0.925/(3.5*0.7) = 37.75%
It's funny how inefficient they are compared to royal blues which are just a some nm away.
isn't the diode used for white phosphor leds a royal blue ?
that must be where all the dev & research $$ is being funneled.
also if you base efficiency on luminous flux don't the wavelengths far away from green such as UV and deep red penalized?
ok I get it, I got confused because of definitions like this:Hi PurpleBuz,
Lumens is where what you described happens, but luminous flux in terms of watts is a "neutral" measurement. ie. not based on human vision sensitivity like lumens & lux.
If you are going to supplement anything I think you want it to be the blues since they are the most efficient no?High efficentwatt, I'm very interested in your search, and also like keeping things simple. How about going with high cbx temps, like 5000k or 5700k top bin cbos + reds, or even 6500k; wouldn't this eliminate the needs for deep blues ? Although not a marijuana grower, I'm very interested into a high quality grow light, which covers the whole spectrum, and does not look as ugly as 2700s look...
Can I ask what is the spectrum tool used, and where did you find it? cheers@qwerkus : When looking at 4K vs 5K, I prefer 4K for multiple reasons (..), but I'm sure 5K + deep red would work too. You should probably add more deep reds per cob than with 4Ks ...
@CanadianONE : Well 450nm blue is plenty enough in all temps, and other blues aren't as efficient. I'm not really that sure adding some near UV blue would be that useful to be honest.
Whereas the deep red part of the spectrum is not only high absorbance area for our plants, it also delivers more photons/PAR W, so more efficient use of "PAR Wattage". That's why you see some going completely overboard with it, like osram with their panel @PSUAGRO is testing out.
If you were to compare radiometric efficiency of different monos to their PPF per W, 47% efficient Deep red monos would probably look a whole lot more attractive all of a sudden
From messing around with a spectrum tool, it looks like to me the *simplest* and most *effective* way to supplement, aiming for more photosynthesis, is adding 1 or 2 Deep red per cob.
72V CXB3590 @ 48.5W + 1DR happens to be ~50W, which works out perfect for HLG / ELG C700 setups.
The CXB's having lens are safe connectionwise. I'd like to make the monos equally safe, I'm thinking acrylic varnish or something of sort. Anyone familiar with a product/solution ?
looks like the sylvania tool to me.Can I ask what is the spectrum tool used, and where did you find it? cheers
Thanks bud!looks like the sylvania tool to me.
https://www.sylvania.com/en-us/tools-and-resources/Pages/LED-ColorCalculator-Version-History.aspx