This photo of yours, jon_slider, clearly shows how a 219B 4K Ra9080 is redder than a 219B “worm” (4K Ra9050?) and how a 219B 4.5K Ra9080 is both redder and bluer. With auto white balance your device adjusts the RGB level information of the picture to more or less “match” that of the reference, this makes it useless or hard material to work with when comparing against photographs with a standard colour balance like “daylight”. The pictures we see in our information technology equipment are just too limited in their colour space compared to the amazing capabilities of the human eye, brain and mind.
It is for this reason that I nearly always shot with daylight white balance, with some sort of note when not. Example:
The usual daylight white balance temperature is probably somewhere between 5500K and 6500K across most if not all devices. This is the reason the above picture looks quite warm, though the actual pleasantness of the above light is much higher than what it may seem (CRI85+ emitter, too).
Cheers :-)