What's this based on? Any source?They threw in some 660nm reds. Big deal - green is more important at these PPFD intensities anyways which the 4000k in their engine has plenty of.
What's this based on? Any source?
Stephen linked the journal I was referencing. The whole thing is really a fascinating read - from their thought experiment they estimate that nearly 80%* of green light passes the outer chloroplasts compared to <1% red.What's this based on? Any source?
You complain about green light but you ignore the IR produced by the DE fixture.So it barely beats DE HPS? 1.82 PPF/W...? .
It was a "good" spec guess in 2015 .....................oh well, efficient horti-cobs are on the horizon, hopefully
Ah this study again, detour effect and florescence capture..........still red leaning spd is what you want for flowering annuals, no doubt. Decades of one street light being used for flower over its more green driven/ higher output brother ===== LPSAnother Cree reference design..... I have a couple more but they where never distributed so I can't share unfortunately.....
try pct.cree.com you can play with all kind of configurationsBorrowing the thread;
Which cree mono in royal blue is most efficient? XP-E, XP-E2 or XQ-E?
Also the new bin for XP-E photo red seems to have reduced in size compared to older bins. Have trouble to find mcpcb that fits it.
Going for blurple setup to my lettuce garden as i'm not happy with the results from full spectrum white led.
IR is not part of PPF (400-700Nm), so you don't have to take that out.You complain about green light but you ignore the IR produced by the DE fixture.
Take out the 15% IR and the DE is about 1.46. Or lets say some of the IR is used say 10% is unused. Then it is 1.54 PPF.
The test may have its flaws but I dont see this as one that is a issue. At 15% removed for the IR the DE is at 80% of the PPF per watt and with 5% of the IR used it is at a little less than 85%.