[Review] E21A R9080 5000K

You say you respectfully disagree, but then you go on to straight-up do the opposite. You twist what I said about improving the store into some attack on me. You call me “indignant” when I straight-up said Clemence did nothing wrong or deceitful. My OP was very clear about the how and why I measured the emitter bare. You need to be very careful about stomping on people that post bare-emitter test data, this barking you do creates the situation where BLF has nobody that posts this stuff. You talk education, while barking at test results. These tests were done bare for a good reason, you are in the wrong thread if you can’t tolerate this type of test.

Nobody minds you posting bare LED tests, but claiming Clemence may have shipped you the wrong item or that it’s his responsibility to educate customers about basic characterististics of all high power LEDs is taking it way too far. Clemence provides significantly more information about the LEDs he stocks than literally any other seller in the entire world. He also goes to great lengths to personally assist many customers in selecting the correct product. If you had told him your requirements in advance he would almost certainly have advised you to purchase a different product or take an entirely different approach to your lighting setup design. Nobody is “barking” at you over your tests, they just think you should accept that no one else is to blame here. You didn’t fully understand what you were purchasing or testing, and now you do. Clemence has also very graciously offered to help you investigate further if you believe there is something wrong with the E21As you received.

Where did I claim that?

Again, where did I claim that?

That’s one hell of a claim I think you pulled out of thin air.

Where did I claim I wasn’t to blame?

Again, where did I claim that?

I think there is a different conversation going on inside your head.

Communication is layered and imperfect. The original meaning is rendered into words, transmitted, and then transformed back into a meaning in the recipient’s head. It’s a lossy process requiring interpretation.

People seem to be interpreting certain meanings here, and enough people have done so that it’s probably a fair interpretation. So if the message they’re receiving isn’t the one which was intended, something probably went wrong during the process of converting the original message into words.

Telling the recipients they are wrong doesn’t really solve anything — getting defensive only reinforces the idea that the negative interpretations were accurate. However, rendering the message with clearer words can help. Like, responding with “Oops, that’s not what I meant… lemme go fix that. Thanks!” and updating the review accordingly.

More specifically, I think people are looking for something like this: “I bought these for a specific purpose, but did not know they were designed to be used in a different way, so they don’t work for me. Oops. It turns out that the specs are about the integrated output, not a single-point output. People helped me understand it better though, and maybe with some extra parts I can still use them for what I had in mind since they’re pretty close to spec when used as intended.”

I update the OP with the info from the discussion.

No, it appears what is happening is jon_slider’s single post #16 tried to frame me as if I attacked Clemence, a family member here on BLF. That’s just not what happened, but Bob_McBob was triggered, and took post #16 and tried to evolve it. I trust the edits to the OP are to everyone’s satisfaction.

I know that you believe you understand what you think I said, but I’m not sure you realize that what you heard is not what I meant at all.

Thanks for the updates. It’s not just the OP though. It seems like people’s interpretation of other details is probably fair too, like comment #15. I got the impression that something wasn’t right even before jon’s reply, but didn’t feel the need to say anything because when I scrolled down I found it had already been said. The issues didn’t start when someone pointed them out… Pointing out the issues isn’t the problem.

Going back to the beginning though…

This is defensive and abrasive right from the start, even in the revised version. It frames things as the emitter sucking, rather than being an error in how the emitter was measured. It implies that people in a previous thread were not sane, taking a jab at whatever prior drama inspired this thread. Basically, it starts off with messages which invite fighting and friction, which sets the tone for the rest of the thread. It gives the impression that there is a chip on your shoulder, daring people to knock it off.

Is that an inaccurate interpretation? Was making a contentious point not the goal? If not, set a different tone. Let go of past disagreements and start fresh without letting old battles color the present.


Later on in the thread, things continue and hint that Clemence was at fault somehow, despite going above and beyond what is normal or required for his job. He is typically unusually good about how he runs his business and how he interacts with people, so people aren’t happy about the implication that he did something wrong by only going one extra mile instead of two.

But it is also somewhat understandable to expect more from him, because that’s how human psychology works. If someone consistently delivers 90% of what is required, people will only expect 50% and then be silent when the person doesn’t mess up. But if someone consistently delivers 110, people will expect 150 and then complain when it doesn’t happen. :frowning:

Anyway, with this and some other recent threads, one is left to wonder if the goal is mainly to share useful measurements, or if the goal is more about proving some sort of point.

I hope this makes sense. The measurements are good, and it’s helpful to have more people on BLF doing high-quality spectrometer work. Stuff like that is the lifeblood of BLF. It just seems a bit high in salt, which isn’t good for the blood pressure.

The only remaining rub is how Jon and TK expect me to reverse an unbiased review because they are buddies with the seller. This is not ok.
This is a double standard that you are trying to use to make the Virence review flawless. You would be nothing but thanking me for the review if it was bought from Banggood. Let’s leave the review alone. It’s not fair to be influencing it.

To be fair Joshk, even Toykeeper can make errors. She’s human after all. She’s no perfect.

Back on topic however, did you think about adding a diffusing sheet to the light you are building?

What clemence said is true. CCTs can vary actually vary 10-20% from the spec sheet when viewed directly.

It’s something interesting I encountered during my time at my lighting job.

Powering on 3500k LED strips in a light sphere, I noticed that the CCT was way too high(3950k), unlike I put on the diffusing lens on, where it went down to around 3600k.

I don’t remember the other values, but this is the one which this thread made me remember about.

TLDR: To be honest for once, ToyKeeper is feeding fuel to the fire unknowingly by overcomplicating stuff and trying to understand everybody else’s behaviors. She’s thinking too much for such a little skirmish.

TLDR 2: Specs from the manufacturer were attained during testing.

That is so true. We cannot expect Clemence to write an entire encyclopedia of all possible parameters and scenarios of LED behavior. Even the largest most reputable LED shops don’t provide the in depth information and education on LEDs they sell like Virence.com does. Many veteran BLFers are only recently starting to learn how emitters can produce so different tint depending on how it’s being used. I use to hate the greenish, and high tintshift, LH351D with a passion but now I will be using my M43 LH351D mule for indoor photography and I love the tint when it’s not behind optics or reflectors. I doubt many people realize how nice even a greenish emitter can look when used as a mule as this really isn’t common knowledge yet.

Since even the general LED sellers thousands of times larger than Virence.com and even the LED manufacturers themselves never made any mentions of how their LED can behave so different from spec when used without optics/reflectors or when used with different optics/reflectors/diffusers, I don’t think anyone should fault Clemence for not stating this phenomenon on his website.

Yea I considered putting some of my D-C-Fix in front of the E21, but it doesn’t have a diffusion effect up close, and further away creates a bigger emitting circle. The small point-light was the job of this build. Point lights can create a glisten in the surface reflections of objects. With a larger emitter spot it’s effect is not really different from a typical light bulb.

And I agree it’s a bit out of character for TK to join a skirmish and fuel it.

And yea, in the end the emitter’s behavior has been full explained. And Clemence/Virence is not at fault for what transpired.

You’re taking the encyclopedia idea a bit far, all I suggested was that the Virence store stated something similar to “Posted emitter data was collected inside an integrating sphere, with no optics, and with a power level of 700ma.”

@Joshk, ahhh!

I know what you need!

You need literal light bulb shades glued around the emitters.

Just order some online, or do some dumpster diving and rip apart the LED bulbs.

That’s actually a really good idea! A small frosted piece could do the job up close. I need to find a piece. Thanks :smiley:

I agree. The 700 mAh test seems to be typical for manufacturers to report, but not typical for your max lumens application needs…

Thanks for your time and efforts to acquire tools, take measurements, and share your results.
And Im always happy when variations in measurement protocols, or variations in use patterns, can be found to explain apparent discrepancies in results.

I look forward to more of your contributions.
If anything I say seems offensive, it is unintended.

It sounds as if you’ve entirely missed the point of my comments here. I don’t expect you to reverse a review or anything of the sort. I was hoping that maybe you could stop inciting what you’ve described as “skirmishes”.

It’s not about the performance details of a particular emitter, or the measurements posted in a review. It’s about a pattern of aggressive social behavior across several threads.

The same pattern continued in today’s new thread about DC-Fix window film, opening the thread by firing a preemptive shot, daring jon_slider to argue with you. That’s pretty explicitly picking a fight.

I don’t normally pay much attention, but when drama persists long enough I often hear about it. That’s what happened here — have been hearing about this saga for over a week now. It’s visible to the public and people elsewhere read it and talk about it, saying stuff like “Hey, Josh posted again. Better make more popcorn.” It has become enough of a spectacle that I hear chatter about it while I’m not even on BLF.

I hate to deny people their popcorn, but it would be nice if BLF got more attention for making cool stuff and less attention for making drama.

It’s also has quite a bit to do with a choice of words, and a degree of tact to express your thought, or to invite other people to join the discussion without turning people off in the process.

I learned that the hard way not too long ago (not here though), back when I was a little more feisty with my language of choice.

At the end of the day, I might end up discovering the same result, and deliver the same message. But there are words I would choose not to use for a written review, be the item from Banggood, Aliexpress, or well-known sellers.

:+1: Peace. Let’s end on that note. I’m not interested in the direction TK is trying to take this.

For what it’s worth, Nichia’s datasheet, which Clemence links from his store, does chart the shift in chromaticity coordinate with varying current.

The way I see it, bare LEDs are not consumer products. As with other products intended for industrial use, they’re intended for expert users, and sellers might reasonably assume buyers are willing to take a risk buying a few units to see if it will work for their application. I say this having destroyed every E21A I’ve ever owned - most of them through user error.

I do think E21As behind a diffusion screen are likely a good fit for OP’s application.

Thanks for editing the DC-Fix review to remove combative bits and add more detail about the test procedure. :+1: