The "top bin" can change as production methods improve. Initially the CXA3070 3000K top bin was Z2, but was replaced with the Z4 and eventually the AB. When the CXB3070 was release the 3000K top bin was now AD and it drew less power on top of that. So the Z2 was once considered top bin and could now be called low bin.I may have missed this but how do you determine what is "top bin" for various lights and spectrums?
I'm particularly interested in CXB 3590 3500s, 3070 3500s, 3070 4000s and 3070 5000s. I intend to do a mixture of spectrums using top bins for each but I don't know how we figure out CXB 3070 3500 top bin is BB? I know this is extremely rudimentary, so apologies to those who see this as "old hat".
Thanks for the reply.The sheets I posted are based on "typical" figures at Tj 50C (junction temp). They take vF drop at 50C into account, temp droop and current droop. At higher current Tj 50C may not be realistic and at low current you can probably get below Tj 50C.
The other graph is based on Tc (case temp) but other than that I can't speak on how exactly the numbers were derived. According to the Cree sheet, at 1900mA, Tc 55C = Tj 85C.
Another way to put it, it is kind of a mess and once again we are left guessing to some extent. The same goes for the Vero PDFs if I recall, there is some confusion regarding which specs are based on junction temp and which are based on case temp.
Hmm maybe if so that would definitely change things for me is cxb3070 bb was just as efficient as cxb3590 CD at same current/wattage.The "top bin" can change as production methods improve. Initially the CXA3070 3000K top bin was Z2, but was replaced with the Z4 and eventually the AB. When the CXB3070 was release the 3000K top bin was now AD and it drew less power on top of that. So the Z2 was once considered top bin and could now be called low bin.
Also worth mentioning, there are nearly top bins and very top bins. For example @REALSTYLES got his hands on 7 of the CXB3590 6500K DD bin, which was the very top bin for 6500K and at the time very rare. The nearly top bin was the DB and you can now get it in color temp as low as 4000K 70 CRi from Cutter. The very top bins probably go to VIP customers that get first dibs and they may only show up in small quantities as left overs or samples. The other possibility is that they just mix in the super rare performers and they get binned lower than they really perform.
View attachment 3570443
To answer your question, it makes sense that the CXB3070 3500K BB is the equivalent bin as the CXB3590 3500K CD in terms of the blue dies that are used. Because of it larger size and larger number of dies, all else being equal I would expect the 3590 CD to be slightly more efficient than the 3070 BB, and the curves and temp testing seems to confirm that. That said, @Greengenes707 had direct contact with CREE and was told otherwise, so that may be up for debate.
Thanks for the detailed response Supra,The "top bin" can change as production methods improve. Initially the CXA3070 3000K top bin was Z2, but was replaced with the Z4 and eventually the AB. When the CXB3070 was release the 3000K top bin was now AD and it drew less power on top of that. So the Z2 was once considered top bin and could now be called low bin.
Also worth mentioning, there are nearly top bins and very top bins. For example @REALSTYLES got his hands on 7 of the CXB3590 6500K DD bin, which was the very top bin for 6500K and at the time very rare. The nearly top bin was the DB and you can now get it in color temp as low as 4000K 70 CRi from Cutter. The very top bins probably go to VIP customers that get first dibs and they may only show up in small quantities as left overs or samples. The other possibility is that they just mix in the super rare performers and they get binned lower than they really perform.
View attachment 3570443
To answer your question, it makes sense that the CXB3070 3500K BB is the equivalent bin as the CXB3590 3500K CD in terms of the blue dies that are used. Because of it larger size and larger number of dies, all else being equal I would expect the 3590 CD to be slightly more efficient than the 3070 BB, and the curves and temp testing seems to confirm that. That said, @Greengenes707 had direct contact with CREE and was told otherwise, so that may be up for debate.
I was wondering about doing it that way, but you would need to take numerous measurements.Sorry about the late response, but technically you could use a PAR meter for determining the PPF of a COB without an integrating sphere. You need to move the PAR meter in a quarter circle over the led measuring all the beam angles and then integrate the PPF from those measurements.
Not exactly. The closest thing is true flat plane integration. Which would take 100X more work to do than a sphere because the light is no longer confined...and you will have to measure IT ALL to be anywhere close to correct. And is not a totally scientifically recognized method.Sorry about the late response, but technically you could use a PAR meter for determining the PPF of a COB without an integrating sphere. You need to move the PAR meter in a quarter circle over the led measuring all the beam angles and then integrate the PPF from those measurements.
Can anyone tell me if this any good?
http://growgreenmi.com/quantum-par-meter-micromols?gclid=Cj0KEQiAqemzBRDh2vGKmMnqoegBEiQAqJPuyADGtUWHMlryHlR9QuhHEd4pkMf_H_d__8ZpdMtgKvIaAv9d8P8HAQ
I'm trying to figure out just how much LED power is needed to get the same results as 43 watt/ft2 of a Hortilux 1000 watt HPS. I was planning on buying a PAR meter to measure the HPS and a 430 watt at the wall Vero 29 budget build. Then, compare them, do a little math, and start replacing my HPS. But, after reading this thread and doing a little bit of other research. I've learn all PAR Meter sensers aren't the same and most don't really measure the whole PAR spectrum. So, at best, these meters are only good for compare one white LED to another, not a HPS.
Everyone seems to be going on about grams per watt. I'm getting .8 - 1 gram/watt from my HPS of top shelf rock hard bud. I seen gardens running 600 watt HPS with higher grams per watt than mine, but the density isn't as good with the same cuts. Grams per is a good measure of efficiency but, efficiency comes in second to quality IMO. Can anyone tell me exactly how much LED power is needed or do I have to start experimenting?
If it is too hard and/or expensive to measure everywhere how about doing comparative testing using optics? The same testing with the same optics on each cob, and there s no stray light to worry about.Not exactly. The closest thing is true flat plane integration. Which would take 100X more work to do than a sphere because the light is no longer confined...and you will have to measure IT ALL to be anywhere close to correct. And is not a totally scientifically recognized method.
Flat plane integration- Measurements were made in a dark room with flat black walls using a quantum sensor (LI-COR model LI-190, Lincoln, NE, USA), that was calibrated for each fixture with an NIST-traceable calibrated spectroradiometer. This calibration is necessary to correct for small spectral errors (± 3%) in the quantum sensor that occur because of imperfect matching of the ideal quantum response [16]. Measurements were made in three radial, straight lines below a level fixture and spatially integrated to determine total photon output. Measurements were made 2.5 cm apart near the center, increasing to 10 cm near the perimeter as PPF variation decreased. Fixtures were mounted 0.7 meters above the surface and measurements were made up to a 1.5 meter radius from the center and extrapolated farther using an exponential decay function. The flat-plane integration measurements were used to quantify the pattern of photon distribution from the fixture. Total fixture output from these measurements was similar to measurements made using an integrating sphere (Table 2). When redundant measurements were available, the integrating sphere measurements were used to quantify fixture efficiency.
** Notice the use of a decay function to extrapolate every photon all the way the true end of coverage(0umols).
***people please do not confuse this with the common "PAR map". FPI may be a map, but basic maps are not FPI.
I just changed my plan of 16 cxb3590's @ ~My take is that I can run more 3070s and run softer than the 3590 and get close efficiency with better spread for a similar or better price of purchase
I run 800w of Vero 29 cobs in about 11sqft. Donkey colas solid buds. The avatar is tda 3d and blue dream. And some SSH somewhere in there. I'm with you on quality. But I like to save a buck. I ordered 16 cxb3070 and will add 16 more this summer. 20w each?Can anyone tell me if this any good?
http://growgreenmi.com/quantum-par-meter-micromols?gclid=Cj0KEQiAqemzBRDh2vGKmMnqoegBEiQAqJPuyADGtUWHMlryHlR9QuhHEd4pkMf_H_d__8ZpdMtgKvIaAv9d8P8HAQ
I'm trying to figure out just how much LED power is needed to get the same results as 43 watt/ft2 of a Hortilux 1000 watt HPS. I was planning on buying a PAR meter to measure the HPS and a 430 watt at the wall Vero 29 budget build. Then, compare them, do a little math, and start replacing my HPS. But, after reading this thread and doing a little bit of other research. I've learn all PAR Meter sensers aren't the same and most don't really measure the whole PAR spectrum. So, at best, these meters are only good for compare one white LED to another, not a HPS.
Everyone seems to be going on about grams per watt. I'm getting .8 - 1 gram/watt from my HPS of top shelf rock hard bud. I seen gardens running 600 watt HPS with higher grams per watt than mine, but the density isn't as good with the same cuts. Grams per is a good measure of efficiency but, efficiency comes in second to quality IMO. Can anyone tell me exactly how much LED power is needed or do I have to start experimenting?
Ya, totally fine and useful. That is a relative test and what most meters are perfect for. Precision will be there, and it's the precision is the important part in a relative test. It can be inaccurate by a lot...as long as it's consistent in it's in accuracy...that is/equals precision. Assuming no color shift with the optics(99%shouldn't), it's a very valid test.If it is too hard and/or expensive to measure everywhere how about doing comparative testing using optics? The same testing with the same optics on each cob, and there s no stray light to worry about.
The optics loss is then added back to the results...?
The problem I see is finding/or making universal optics/reflector
All of this testing is above my level of experience.I stand by the actual
Ya, totally fine and useful. That is a relative test and what most meters are perfect for. Precision will be there, and it's the precision is the important part in a relative test. It can be inaccurate by a lot...as long as it's consistent in it's in accuracy...that is/equals precision. Assuming no color shift with the optics(99%shouldn't), it's a very valid test.
Absolute values are where things have to really get measured correctly. I have measured single die, cobs and full fixtures...none emit a perfectly symmetrical pattern. It may be just a few µmols, but it's measurable and should be accounted for if looking for the almighty true facts....or any kind of tie breaker.