Hi Slewflash and congrats on the meter. It is a wonderful thing to be able to suddenly quantify some aspects of the hobby like this. That said. on to the readings.
I am, as you may very well know, quite endeared by the little Jacob A60 that DX sells. But I find that if I do lux measurements on it at 2 meters I get 35 kCd. 4 meters gets me ~50 kCd but 10 meters gets me 55 kCd readings.
That little sucker needs some room to "stretch its legs" so to speak. What happens is that the beam is not focused at the shorter distances. So you need that distance.
Another thought for you.
Since the Crelant gives the brighter ceiling bounce it puts out the most lumens - right?
But if it does that and at the same time has less spill then more of that light must go into the center beam - right?
That should mean that it has more lumens converted to lux by the reflector. Only fault I can find in my ramblings above is that I do not know which light has the tightest/brightest spot.
(If someone who reads this is thinking "What IS the guy on about now?" please correct me. The above observations are my laymans perspective on this issue :-) )
BTW: TY for posting this Slewflash. It is interesting to me to see the measurements people are getting with these lights.
I do love to be able to measure the lux on my lights which is why I bought it. I just want to know everything about the light
The crelant gives a smaller and tighter hotspot see here
Later today I’ll measure the readings again at 10 meters to let them both ‘fully stretch their legs’, hopefully I’ll be pleasantly surprised.
The crelant has brighter ceiling bounce, but smaller spill and hotspot (so I suspect that either the spill or the hotspot has to be brighter).
An update: I took readings at 5, 10 and even 15 meters.
The Skyray STL-V2 still comes out on top. What a disappointing result. Hopefully when I can get my hands on a modded X6 I’ll be happy with the results
I've found that my light meter doesn't do as well with the beam pointed directly at the sensor. A dedicated thrower having overall lower lumens output can read higher because of the more concentrated beam. That's the whole theory behind a sphere and why, when even using my meter comparing ceiling bounce, the relative results are not always reliable.
I’m panning it around to find the brightest spot.
With the collimator head, it gets a bit tricky because it’s an aspheric so the readings can go from very high (125,000 lux) all the way down to 65,000 lux.
And yep, I used 2 fully charged cells for the readings. But now that I think about it, even if they were at 50% capacity it would still have the same output, since they’re not direct drive.
As I understand it it goes by the inverse square law so the amount of light at 2 meters is equal to the amount at 1/2^2 or 1/4 of what it would be at 1 meter.