TA, in order to make this project work as expected, is it safe to assume that:
(1) after measuring several lights from respected manufacturers, each of us could come up with our own correction factor, and end up with relatively accurate readings?
(2) that correction factor should be about the same for everyone?
Based on four of the lights I've measured so far (from respected manufactures), my correction factor would be .72
Using a correction factor only takes a few seconds to compute, really no big deal.
Yes, that would work but a “standard” correction factor for everyone would keep all the numbers comparable. For that we need as large a data pool as possible and then to average the results.
If I could get some lights measured by a real ANSI sphere for calibration proposes that would be great, then for the first time I would have a standard I trust to calibrate my sphere and figure out a correction factor for everyone.
As I am sure many have noticed, lights vary a lot from the ratings. They may be ok in some modes but it is quite rare for them to be correct in all modes with all batteries.
I may be on to something. I remember reading somewhere about someone using tissue paper in there lumen tube. Maybe it was TA?
I grabbed an extra waxed paper from donut section of the grocery store this morning. One piece over the sensor dropped it a little, two pieces were closer and three pieces seem just right.
Now the tube is reading pretty much the same as the JoshK sphere or just a tiny bit higher. Assuming that’s what we’re aiming for. Also, the amount of time the light is on before taking the reading does make a large difference and might explain why it’s not exact.
Here’s how I measured my BLF GT. I used a C8 reflector. I then stuck it in the appropriate sized ring. LOL.
GT in TA tube:
Stock tube - 3300 lm - obviously too high
3 layers - 2200 lm - pretty realistic
I know it’s not the same without the big reflector and lens, but that doesn’t fit on the 3” tube. No biggie. It’s the only light I have that doesn’t fit.
The reading is about 1/3 higher than what is expected. We’ve seen this value before. The 4” tubes were measuring 1/3 lower, which is related to the fact that a 4” tube
has 1/3 more surface than a 3” tube.
Is there perhaps some kind of mix up?
The final calibration on all the tubes should be the same +/-~5%.
Although I do agree that it is looking like the calibration that I am using is indeed about ~30% too high.
I just need to get some hard data / more data and we can come up with a hard value for a correction factor.
After look at my notes from 2 years ago and applying what I have learned in that time, I am not as surprised that the readings are high, although I am VERY surprised they are so high.
Luckily it is easily correctable once we figure out a good correction factor.
… just curious, perhaps others in the know could chime in on this: If these spheres are reading high, does that mean the HaikeLite group buy lights rated around 20,000 lumens after TA’s mods, are are all overrated? This stuff gets confusing
agree, it’s just a number, and I couldn’t be happier with my MT03 and TA driver. The driver added some ~ 4000 lumens I think, a wonderful UI, and it’s bright as the sun.
I like to caution the idea of assuming respected manufacturer’s lights are accurate and consistent throughout. I just posted some ceiling bounce results for my AA lights and there are several identical lights from “respectable” companies that show considerable variation in light output. My ceiling bounce measurements have been extremely consistent even when measuring the same light months apart.
Also I prefer we don’t apply our own correction factor and instead apply a standard correction factor among all the lumen tubes. One of the main benefits of so many people owning TA lumen tubes is so we have a standardized basis to compare lumens among members. Even if the lumen tubes are not calibrated to realistic lumens, they are still calibrated consistently among all the units so we need to come up with standardized correction factor.
M43 is very consistent. Output remains constant all the way down to 3.5V (boost driver). I’ve got three identical, and output is very close to each other.
Yes, as they were setup at the start looks to be pretty close to what they need to be. Although they have now been calibrated up to match the rest so it really doesn’t apply now.
TA, is your plan to get a couple of properly measured lights from Maukka and then figure out a simple and repeatable way to reduce output on the sensor?
I would much rather we do that so that we can still use the numbers directly off the Lux meter. I realize we can just use a correction factor and do the math, but that’s not ideal to me. We can still make these tubes live up to the intended expectations.
BTW, I’m going to put off measurin all my lights for a few days when I have more time. Plus other people will be receiving theirs. We will get it sorted out. :+1: