Flowering with Cree bulbs

Abiqua

Well-Known Member
I checked that, too, and both have the same serial number (BA19-08050OMF-12DE26-2U100) and UPC codes!
Almost for sure imho that it is just a packaging change. The older versions of the 9.5w's, were 1U100 not "2".
 

subb

Well-Known Member
Also not sure what the High CRI is, but these were just the basic 60w equivalent Daylight bulbs
 

Abiqua

Well-Known Member
Also not sure what the High CRI is, but these were just the basic 60w equivalent Daylight bulbs
They made a funky "true white" blue bulb that had the lense coated blue to give it a higher CRI, like 93+, but they were expensive too....
 

subb

Well-Known Member
Yeah I was thinking it might just be a package upgrade, but they are definitely different, at LEAST in the coating. That might be the only difference, though. If that is the case I will get the ones that are slightly more translucent.
 

Abiqua

Well-Known Member
I still have versions with the globes intact, nothing wrong with them staying on :peace:

The other change to the bulbs, besides the diodes, was to strengthen the glue that attaches the globes :)
 

subb

Well-Known Member
Thanks guys! I just wanted to make sure I was getting the biggest bang for my buck.. didn't want to buy a bulb with lesser diodes or anything like that. The more translucent ones are at a Home Depot that's closer to me anyway, so that's good :P

So basically if they change the light components at all it will have a new serial number?
 

hyroot

Well-Known Member
The added spectrum is green and yellow,won't give you much bang for your buck.

View attachment 3238269

You have it backwards. The higher the cri the more even the spectral distribution. That's why hps has 35 cri and cmh has 93 cri. 80 cri has more wasted light than 90 cri. High cri doesn't mean just more added green and yellow. That would lower the cri. Higher cri means all wave lengths are more equal in intensity. ie even spectral distribution




Notice how the 80 cri has more 580 nm than the 93 cri. the 93 cri peaks are broader than the 80 cri.
 
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reasonevangelist

Well-Known Member
You have it backwards. The higher the cri the more even the spectral distribution. That's why hps has 35 cri and cmh has 93 cri. 80 cri has more wasted light than 90 cri. High cri doesn't mean just more added green and yellow. That would lower the cri. Higher cri means all wave lengths are more equal in intensity. ie even spectral distribution




Notice how the 80 cri has more 580 nm than the 93 cri. the 93 cri peaks are broader than the 80 cri.
DAT PURPLE LINE OMG...

Want.

(yes i have actually seen this before, many times)
 

hyroot

Well-Known Member
Notice how much more the 93 CRI has between 480 and 580.

And anything beats HPS's spectral graph.

you notice how more even the 93 cri is. it has more between 480 and 550, after 550. the 80 cri has more. its clear the 80 cri has more wasted light.
 

captainmorgan

Well-Known Member
I don't think the added cost of high CRI LED's is worth it. Another words the added spectrum won't add much vs a high bin 3070 80 CRI,if money is no object you can also add larger heatsinks to add efficiency and buy high efficiency drivers. Not much bang for the buck with that set up tho.
 

reasonevangelist

Well-Known Member
I don't think the added cost of high CRI LED's is worth it. Another words the added spectrum won't add much vs a high bin 3070 80 CRI,if money is no object you can also add larger heatsinks to add efficiency and buy high efficiency drivers. Not much bang for the buck with that set up tho.
more blue in the high CRI... better for veg than the others. Maybe worth it so you don't need dedicated veg lamps to avoid the red-heavy stretching? (plus there's more "far red" in the "purple line"...)
 

subb

Well-Known Member
(just to alert you)
Hey Captain, I had an idea I wanted to run by you. I've seen people disassemble these Cree bulbs and make their own flat panels out of the innards. I haven't really seen the insides of my bulbs yet, but what do you think of this idea: Say I take the glass domes off all the bulbs and unravel that diode pillar so it's just a flat piece, but keep all the components inside the base still. Not sure if this would work, but thought it might be a good way to get all the diodes on a flat plane. I don't think the metal pillars should touch one another, though. I'm also not sure if I would need to add any additional lenses or anything like that, as far as light dispersal goes. Or if the build will even allow that..

Thoughts?
 

subb

Well-Known Member
Ah yeah I was gonna ask about that, too. I suppose if I did this I may as well make my own panel with them, BUT if I were to go that route I would just get some better Cree COBs and build my own. Definitely plan to do that one day down the road!
Thanks captain!

I think I just like making things very complicated for myself.. I will just use the damn bulbs, I am sure they will veg very wonderfully :P
 
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