[GB ended,discussion only] CRI > 80+ NICHIA 2000K-6500K [E21A/219B/219C/319A/144A/757GT-F1(Optisolis)]

Just for fun....

Hi Clemence,

I appreciate your Rp 2 very much. :slight_smile:

I read your thoughts about AlN in your VirEnce CDTP MCPCB thread, so you already mentioned it.

The beamshots and FWHM-graphs you posted are from Carclo, right?

I think their numbers are very much like I would have expected, with one big exception…

… the NVSL219B. I really think they mixed something up there. In fact, I have the feeling they tested a NCSL219B…

All numbers would make perfect sense to me than.

EDIT: I just wrote them an e-mail asking for clarification.

Yes, I got them pics from Carclo’s website.
I don’t think they mixed it with NCSL, it’s what it is.
Beam angle order in 10511: 219B - E17A - E21A - 219C - 319A (weird huh?)
If we follow common sense based on die area geometries it supposed to be like this: E17A - E21A - 219B - 219C - 319A
So far, the only explanation logcal to me is in their focal plane (die height) differences. Anything lower than ~ 0,6mm - 0,73mm (XPG) will off focus. 219B, 219C, and 319A are all have 0,4mm focal plane. That’s why their sequence looks OK.

Hi,

please take a look at the Cd/lm numbers of the 10193 optic.

  • NVSW 319A Cd/lm: 9.5
  • NVSW 219C Cd/lm: 12.5
  • NVSW E21A Cd/lm: 20.66
  • NVSL 219B Cd/lm: 23.1 (NCSL219B!?)
  • NCSW E17A Cd/lm: 34

I really do think they mixed that up.

I don’t know. But that looks OK to me since 219B has smaller die than 219C. E21A and E17A could be close to 30 and 40 cd/lm if the height adjusted.

Also, why would the NVSL219B have so much higher Cd/lm values than the NVSL219C, when they have about the same die-height and die-size?

We were talking about 10511. And in that particular optics the cd/lm number looks normal.
The latter optics you posted indeed has too much difference for such a slight difference in die area (219C vs. 219B)

Yup, that’s right. Sorry, I was talking about the 10511 indeed. But when I looked at the numbers from other optics that’s when I realized that something isn’t right about those numbers. Not that clear when you just look at the 10511’s numbers.

Swapped xpg3 90cri out for nichia 219C sm503 in a triple x6 and it looks great with no green. As noted by TA, maybe slight blue if you are sensitive to CW but in general a very pure white.

The 4000k is just slightly warmer than I like and the 5000k slightly cooler. I’m going to try 2 of each when I rebuild my s41 and see how that turns out.

Thanks Illuminos for the report. I just want to know who else got the green other than Mustsimon.
How is it compared to XPG3 90CRI? I mean real world colour reproduction?

Got my LEDs Texas! Thank you very much!

Great!

In response to the request for sm503 impressions, I gave mine before, but I’ll add some white wall comparisons. I do like these emitters, but I thought I was going to love them. I’m not sure if it’s just that nothing can compare to the 219B R9080, which is a warm fuzzy feeling turned into photons or if they’re actually a little off. The 319A looks maybe a hair cooler, but no green. I think it’s even a tiny bit rosy, but it’s hard to be sure since it’s behind an AR lens.

So here’s a 319A sm505 on the left and a 219C sm503 on the right, taken with my Nexus 5 with the white balance set to 6500K. Note that I don’t think the numbers indicated for the white balance correspond to reality - that’s just the setting that seems to produce images that match what my eyes see.

Here’s the 219C sm503 next to the 219B sw45k with the same white balance setting:

Chouster got my package !

Thanks for good delivery and all the work you put in.

Danke schön !

OMD! I thought you were joking….But when I looked at your pictures it is indeed!
compared to 319A sm505, the 219C sm503 looks so much better BUT….when compared to 219B sw45k it turns ugly! :confounded:

It’s not only our eyes, even your Nexus agrees :smiley:

Maukka is definitely needed now. I hope his package will arrive soon.

What’s interesting here is that there’s definitely some automatic post-processing going on other than the color temperature/white balance. The two shots of the sm503 look quite different from each other, appearing green next to the 219B and not next to the 319A. I should re-shoot in RAW, but then I’ll have to figure out reasonable manual post-processing settings.

On the other hand, human vision adjusts to the light sources present, and when I’m adjusted to the sw45k, the sm503 does look green, while it does not if I’m adjusted to most other light sources.

In person, the sm503 looks a tiny bit green next to the 319A sm505. I’m pretty happy with the tint on the 319A - perhaps a little cooler than I thought it would be, but no green. I can’t get it focused perfectly in the TN12 I put it in, so it’s a little ringy and the tint is less even across the beam than I’m used to from Nichia. I like these, and I think they’ll be a great option for when a 219C would be too throwy, or for extra output from triples and quads.

Ok, I took some beamshots indoors and out, shot in RAW and did my best with the post-processing. These may not be the best photos ever, but they should at least be fair to the emitters relative to each other.

Nice Zak. Thanks for the observation and report.
Our eyes indeed adjusted to the nearest comparator. Any cooler tint on and above BBL will have tendency to looks (even perceptually) greenish. The tighter 3 steps will still have variations even though smaller than 5 or 7 steps.
While the 219B tint is pleasantly nice, it’s too poppy for me. I prefer neutral natural tint.

- Clemence

I love the 219B indoors, and for the most part outdoors in manmade surroundings. If you get another batch of these, I’m tempted to buy 40 of them and make some panels for interior lighting. In more natural surroundings, it does seem a little off. The 219C and 319A were quite good. The 319A seems the most neutral to my eye, but colors are a little washed out next to the higher-CRI 219C.

I’m happy with all of these, in case that wasn’t clear. I wish flashlight manufacturers would use any of them.