Number of plants 64
Total time to harvest 70
Grams per Watt 2.265
Grams per kWh 2.696428571
Grams per meter squared 1216.107383
Grams Per kWh per m-2 1.809683605
Total Annual Yield 9448.285714
Annual harvests 5.214285714
Twice what our test user could do and in less than half the space
10X what I could optimally do with 4 plants scrogged, but of course doing this would put me in jail for 10 months, lol
And of course you need a infinite supply of feminized seeds, but even with regular seeds and assuming 50% loss to males...
Number of plants 32
Total time to harvest 70
Grams per Watt 1.1325
Grams per kWh 1.348214286
Grams per meter squared 608.0536913
Grams Per kWh per m-2 0.904841802
Total Annual Yield 4724.142857
Annual harvests 5.214285714
So compared to the test subject and my grow we can conclude that my energy efficiency and crop density make my results about half as efficient as the example SOG, about on par if I managed to double my yield (which I am certain is doable) but the kicker being veg time and I can only get 2.14 crops in a year for a theoretical 858 grams/annum.
Conclusion, grams per watt and/or grams per m-2 are insufficient metrics from which to compare grows to each other. You must take power consumption and time (time to harvest, yearly yields) into account as well. I have calculated all metrics as its easy to do in a spreadsheet, but really all you need are:
Grams Per kWh per m-2 1.809683605 (yield/kWh/area)
Total Annual Yield 9448.285714 (yield x annual harvests)
Annual harvests 5.214285714 (365/time to harvest)
We can also further conclude that with additional space and power for a mother clone area the first metric would obviously decrease with the additional space and power, but who cares when you have eliminated veg time almost entirely and can do 20 pounds a year. If only ;-(
As you have previously stated 'veg time doesn't matter and is mostly related to how many plants you have' (I'm paraphrasing), doesn't hold true, if there is actually an irrelevant piece of information it's the number of plants. Veg time (or the near elimination of it in the case of SOG from seed) obviously makes a huge difference when comparing the efficiencies of one grow to another, even of the same method because one persons SOG may not be as electrically or spatially efficient as the other.