blasterman
Flashlight Enthusiast
- Joined
- Jul 17, 2008
- Messages
- 1,802
It occured to me while looking at the lumen specs for a standard 100-watt incan that's it's about 4x my smaller Bridgelux. Coincidentally, a 440lumen Bridgelux rated at 120 degrees should produce about the same spot intensity as a incan light source that's 4x as bright but tested via a sphere. At least that's my understanding of the math.
So, I tested this with one of my smaller Bridgelux warm-whites just to see if the math was right vs a Sylvania frosted white 100-watt bulb (rated at 1690lumens). I shot both light sources at an exact equal distance over a dusty box of crayons with my dSLR set for manual (1.5 sec F8) . I then converted both images in RAW set for a color temp of 3700 with no other corrections, which retained enough warmth to show the subjective diferences between the light sources.
Sure enough, the brightness levels are almost identical in the final shots. So, both claimed lumen vaues are pretty close with the incan likely being a tad generous. As per prior posts, the reason I like warm-white Bridgelux is because their color rendering in this category is superb and there's no goofing around with bin tints. Crees, especially the WW XPG when it hits ths streets, utterly destroy the Bridgelux in terms of efficiency, but I haven't figured out the exact bin tint to cross reference the WW Bridgelux.
The warmth of the Bridgelux along with color rendition shows how it compares to the 100-watt incan. While the Incan is still quite a bit lower in color temp, the LED does a pretty good job mimmicking the warmth of the incan. While WW LEDs tend to punch up blues just a bit -vs- incan, their over-all color rendering is pretty comparable for general needs. If you throw a WW CFL into the mix the colors tend to get a bit spikey with oranges and yellows getting hyped.
I any case, you can see why I like the WW Bridgelux and why it doesn't take many of them to light up a room with pretty nice light.
Top: Incan / bottom: Bridgelux
http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4048/4291346328_a44d8fef8e_o.jpg
So, I tested this with one of my smaller Bridgelux warm-whites just to see if the math was right vs a Sylvania frosted white 100-watt bulb (rated at 1690lumens). I shot both light sources at an exact equal distance over a dusty box of crayons with my dSLR set for manual (1.5 sec F8) . I then converted both images in RAW set for a color temp of 3700 with no other corrections, which retained enough warmth to show the subjective diferences between the light sources.
Sure enough, the brightness levels are almost identical in the final shots. So, both claimed lumen vaues are pretty close with the incan likely being a tad generous. As per prior posts, the reason I like warm-white Bridgelux is because their color rendering in this category is superb and there's no goofing around with bin tints. Crees, especially the WW XPG when it hits ths streets, utterly destroy the Bridgelux in terms of efficiency, but I haven't figured out the exact bin tint to cross reference the WW Bridgelux.
The warmth of the Bridgelux along with color rendition shows how it compares to the 100-watt incan. While the Incan is still quite a bit lower in color temp, the LED does a pretty good job mimmicking the warmth of the incan. While WW LEDs tend to punch up blues just a bit -vs- incan, their over-all color rendering is pretty comparable for general needs. If you throw a WW CFL into the mix the colors tend to get a bit spikey with oranges and yellows getting hyped.
I any case, you can see why I like the WW Bridgelux and why it doesn't take many of them to light up a room with pretty nice light.
Top: Incan / bottom: Bridgelux
