Actually Babygro, ALL the lights we use in our hobby are rated in lumens. This is probably because we use these lights normally to see with.
I'm not sure what relevance this is Pastor420, I already stated earlier on that lumens is not a particularly good measurement for determining light that plants use because lumens is a measurement system for how much light the human eye can see - not what light spectrum plants actually use which is measured in PAR.
This is precisely why HID lights have such huge lumen outputs - a lot of the light spectrum they outout is in the wavelengths that plants don't use - for example in the yellow and green spectrum. This is why I said earlier - HID's have a PAR output of around 30%, that is - only about 30% of their total light output is in the PAR spectrum plants actually use.
With the broad "HIDs output about 30% PAR" comment, I thought you might be interested in these first two charts.
Yes the charts are interesting, but are they supposed to be disproving something I said? Because they don't - they actually confrm it, if you're able to interpret the graph correctly. What the graph actually shows is the diminishing light intensity caused by the 'inverse square law' of single point light sources in comparison to the sun which is does not have the inverse squre law diminishing light intensity restriction - the suns light intensity is the same whether it's at the top of the plant or the bottom. So that chart shows how the PAR outputs of various wattage single point light source bulbs compare in intensity at various distances from the subject. What it doesn't tell you, is how much of those total bulb output percentages is actually PAR light - all it does is show you how much it increases the closer the light source gets to the subject. This isn't hard to prove at all aka -
400w HPS bulb outputs 55,000 lumens at 1 foot distance over 1 square foot. By my estimation only about 30% of those lumens will be in the PAR spectrum so 55,000 x 30% = 16,5000 PAR lumens. If we increase the distance of the light from the subject by one foot it changes as follows 16,500 divided by 2 foot x 2 foot = 4,125 PAR lumens. So a 400w HPS used at 2 foot distance will only actually output 4,125 PAR lumens. You can see why the output curves go up so sharply the closer the subject gets to the light.
If you read off the chart at 24 inches distance every single one of those light sources apart from the 1000w bulb are at or under 30%. If you calculate the proper distances each of those bulbs should be used at you'll find that pretty much every single one of them is outputting 30% PAR. Even the 1000w bulb when used at 36 inches which is about the correct distance is also outputting about 30% PAR.
Don't confuse the inverse square law with the percentage of total light output as PAR spectrum light.