Rahz
Well-Known Member
SPD is Spectral Distribution, usually presented as a graph showing relative intensity per wavelength of a light source.I totally don't know what these acronyms mean that you guys keep using.
SPD, LER, PPF, and such.
LER is Luminous Efficacy of Radiation, the number of lumens in a radiant watt for any specific SPD.
PPF is Photosynthetic Photon Flux, the number of photons a light source will output.
The chip datasheets generally provide lumens per watt at nominal (recommended) current, along with a graph labeled "relative flux vs current". These charts will show you a percentage of nominal flux at respective currents. Or you can do what @CobKits does and take readings at various currents and make your own graphs.Where do we find the information about the chips being more efficient at lower amperage?
Like RandomHero says the max efficiency will be with the chips dimmed as low as possible. At some point it begins to cost more than it's worth. It can make sense to run any particular chip at 45-60% efficient (maybe a little higher for some chips). Higher efficiency = more chips/cost required but less electricity/cost used over time. If you want to do the math yourself you can use a graph digitizer to digitize an SPD and feed that data into the spreadsheet here: https://www.rollitup.org/t/math-behind.868988/ to find the LER of a spectrum. The L/W as a percentage of the LER will provide the efficiency level.How do we make a calculation for any given chip to tell us what amperage to run it for maximum efficiency?