Why do you buy lights without High-CRI emitters?

I really notice CRI outside of some manmade environments where all the colors are really flat. Low-CRI lighting just looks desaturated, though I’ll admit I don’t necessarily notice as quickly as I might detect a color temperature or severe off-tint that’s not to my liking.

As Cree has been demonstrating lately, high measured CRI is not necessarily sufficient for light to be pleasant to use or to match colors with natural lighting. I want decent tint with my high CRI.

With my BLF pen light working on my cars, I really appreciate the better colors. Sometimes makes the difference of being able to see small parts/wires.

But if I’m trying to dump out over 5K lumens, the contrast isn’t as useful, especially if the beam is extremely floody. If I had a mule, I’d want a tint as cold as my ex-wife’s heart.

2 Thumbs up to Firelight2

I find that warm, low-CRI lighting can make the world look like a great dog marked it, especially with a green off-tint, but high CRI and a non-green tint don’t have that effect at all to my eyes.

Sunlight at midday is roughly 5000K and 100 CRI with so many lumens it hardly even makes sense to use that unit to quantify it. Does daylight look like pee to you as well?

It’s not mutually exclusive. It’s just a relatively small factor in the equation. If one were to write out the qualities which make a light good, as an actual formula, CRI would have a pretty small coefficient. Like, maybe it accounts for 5% of the total. If a beam is already 90% as good as it could be, adding an extra 5% via a high-CRI emitter is a big improvement. But if the other factors only add up to 30, adding an extra 5 doesn’t help much. That effort is better spent on improving one of the factors with a bigger coefficient.

There’s a similar rule in programming. Unrolling loops can help make a program run faster… but one should never actually do it unless all other optimizations have already been made, like making sure the algorithm is the most efficient one available. Only then does it make sense to break out the finishing touches like loop-unrolling.

Yes, all other things being equal, high CRI will generally look better than low CRI. But the other things are usually not equal.

I suspect “world looking like pee” has much more too do with color temperature and the position of the tint near the BBL than it does CRI.

I should revise my earlier statement, which said “I don’t.”

The last light I bought was a BLF Q8, which isn’t high CRI. It’s still pretty nice though. I’ve had a 3D-printed lantern diffuser on it for the past few months, which warms the tint and reduces the CRI even more, but it looks more like an actual candle that way. It gets used quite a bit in candle mode.

So I guess I do buy lights without high-CRI emitters.

But when I want the best tint, I use my triple 219B lights. Particularly one with a Moonlight Special driver, since it doesn’t have the typical FET tint shift.

Or if I want really vivid color, I still haven’t found anything better than my BST-wide. It makes colors more vivid than even a 100CRI light source. It really brings out shades which aren’t normally visible.

would you be OK with High CRI if it had good tint and good beam pattern, in a color temperature you consider “white” and was not too hot?:slight_smile:

they are definitely separate factors, but why settle for less than the best of all the features?

different environments will change how our brain white balances, what looks orange during the day, can look white at night

and what looks white during the day can look blueish at night

there is no single color temperature for all ambient light settings

I only buy lights with Low CRI if I plan to modify them. I dont like using lights with negative R9, so NW is not good enough, and CW is usually Low CRI, so I dont like that. I use my lights mostly in the dark times of day. I can understand if I was working on a car, in the sun, then a bright CW light might be needed.

you can have brightest, or highest CRI

I will trade bright, for good color, because I care about the spectrum balance I use, indoors, close range, with red things

green foliage is not a good test of CRI, in fact CW is better for Green Foliage alone, but not for bark and dirt colors

even how green a tint is, will change based on the white balance of the users brain at the time

Look at the difference in R9 with Low CRI vs High CRI
here is a skillhunt h03 NW, it has good tint, and low CRI

compare the R9 of the Lumintop Tool w N219b, it has good tint and High CRI

Well sure.

If you presented me two different identical lights that had identical lumens, beam patterns, color temperature, and nice below-BBL tint and the only difference between the two was one was high-CRI and the other was not… then of course I would take the high-CRI option.

The problem is that almost never actually happens. High CRI usually comes at the cost of lumens, color temperature, intensity, and/or greenish tint.

I agree that more CRI (red lumens) means less Bright (green lumens), for equal runtime, or the high CRI can be as bright as the Low CRI, but trades for less runtime, to get High CRI at same brightness
and agree High CRI is often warmer CCT (4000k) than Cool White (6000k)
how many lumens do you need and what color temperature do you like?

in my experience, green tint is much more common with Cree than Nichia, and green tint is much more common on cooler lights than warmer ones. I would go so far as to say green tint is more common with Low CRI

intensity sounds like lumens, so thats already covered above, or Im unclear on the difference

HDS makes the same light w N219b 4000k High CRI, max output 200 lumens for 1 hour, or XP-G2 6000k low CRI 250 lumens for 1 hour, with green tint. Same body, same reflector, same battery, same size, same weight, identical except for 50 low cri lumens.

I would take the N219b, but, most people will say they want the one with the most throw, so they will buy the green tinted low cri, since they dont understand those details. And they certainly have no idea that the R9 values are vastly different.

Once they get the memo that High CRI makes for hotter Sex, they might begin to appreciate the waste of 50 green tinted low cri lumens.

another example
I have an Olight S Mini Low CRI, Cool White, green tint, and an
S1 Mini High CRI, Cool White green tint.

I use the High CRI more, almost never use turbo on either light, most of my use is indoors, close range, lower levels. CRI is the deal Maker for my usage scenario.

If you use the light in the bedroom, CRI rules
If youre just strobing cars to direct traffic, then Low CRI is much more aggravating, brighter, and may or may not elicit compliance sooner

marketing spin

High CRI is Sexier than Low CRI!
lol

Wow, apparently you misunderstood my reply! I was totally agreeing with you, why I wrote “Ya, there ain’t many”

You asked: “just how many other high-CRI lights are there?”

So I listed the few I know of… you had already mentioned the Lumintop, so I didn’t list it.

But now I see it wasn’t an actual question :person_facepalming:

.
I’m sorry you thought I was disputing your statement by listing some lights, it wasn’t meant that way at all.

Naw, it just underscored what I said. Getting high-CRI lights off the rack is difficult at best.

I wasn’t sure if you were agreeing with me or pointing out 2 counterexamples.

But even with a bunch of Zebras or Jaxes, that still leaves out a whoooooooooooole lot of other mfrs.

Would be nice if they added HCRI to their collections. Made some headway with NW and even (amazingly) WW, so…

I feel like the slider on this page is interesting and fairly approximate vs. my experience:

https://www.yujiintl.com/high-cri-led-lightin

Maybe subtle at first, but I’ll take the more vivid colors please. :smiley:

I thought I was pretty sensitive to green tint, but I’ve never felt that issue with my nichias and I have them in 5 or 6 lights. Don’t have any of the Cree hcri though.

And yeah, there are some good options out there, but most of them are wonky in one way or another, hence the frustration.

the fact that most flashlight makers and most flashlight buyers dont care about CRI, is real

however, that does not make low CRI better, just marketed better

this thread shows how effectively Low CRI has spun their marketing, some people have been led to believe High CRI has more green tint than low CRI, the opposite is true, so masterful dysinformation campaign by the Low CRI vendors

there is more profit in Low CRI than High CRI
so marketing points out that Low CRI is brighter, and the buyers follow their lead, and buy into the brighter is better idea

courses for horses, if you need brighter, and cant get it with High CRI, then go for brighter

but if you can have bright enough with High CRI, why settle for Low CRI?

If that slider shows accurately the difference between high CRI and low CRI, then I’m definitely in the “I don’t care (much)” camp. It would certainly be at the bottom of the list of things I do care, if I cared at all.

thanks for that link, heres a pic

if you just need a pencil, any CRI will do,

but if you want to really enjoy colors like purple, orange, and red, CRI will help them not to look faded, muddy, and brown

There are no high intensity LEDs that also have high CRI.
If you want both extreme throw and high CRI you need a short arc lamp or possibly HID.
Those come with their own downsides.

I have to say I agree with you. I’ll give up a few lumens for a 5000k tint. And granted the couple lights I put 219c 90 cry 5000k look nice in. But id rather have better output at 4500-6000k. Then high cri. Usually when I use my flashlight I’m doing something and don’t have the time to appreciate the better colors I just need to see something. I find more of a difference looking at something with a cw then a nw emitter. Then let’s say a 70cri nw and a 90 cri nw emitter. Nw is easier to make things out

thanks
can you give examples of usage applications that favor high intensity, and applications that favor high CRI?

could that be greater distances outdoors vs shorter distances indoors?

is throw better for identifying large targets like Deer, and High CRI better for seeing how cooked the meat is on the BBQ, illuminating the food on the table, and relaxing around the campfire after the hunt?

Besides what you mentioned above. I imagibe high intebsity leds are good for stage lighting and other events. Where you need to light up a specific thing and not everything around it Or maybe not. Flashlights make up a very small fraction of a percent or few of led sales. So these high intensity leds arnt made just for us. There are some kind of uses for them

I don’t know if 80cri counts as high cri. But xpl hi comes in 80+cri. I havnt looked at Crees datadheets in awhile to see if they make them in 90 cri. But mtn electronics has a couple of them in 80cri

To me I think 80 cri leds are a good compromise if someone wants better cri without sacrificing output as much as long as you can get the color tempature want. Richard only has them in 2700 and 3000k. And u4 bin. Don’t know if their are others maybe someone can pull their binning chart/order code chart and see for xplhi or other xhp35 hi