That certainly looks better. You say you put two sheets of diffuser material in the middle? They are probably acting like a single sheet. It would probably be better to spread them out. That way you have partially diffused light coming from the first one and then hitting the 2nd sheet to further diffuse it.
I am trying to find out what others have measured the x7r turbo at. 31% below spec seems pretty big, but might be accurate. Manufacturers often over rate their products output, but I thought olight would be a bit closer than this.
Okay, it seems Maukka has tested the x7r. It was tricky for him to measure because the proximity sensor would reduce output. He measured 3 lower levels in his sphere, then measured all levels outside the sphere, I’m guessing like a ceiling bounce. Then he matched up the 3 lower levels and calculated the upper levels. He also says the 12,000 lumen rating from Olight is at Turn On, not 30 seconds. :disappointed:
Maukkas Turbo S measurements at 30 seconds were 9,700 lumen. Your still reading about 14% lower than him. Maybe the proximity sensor is reducing output? IDK.
I asked him about this as well. He has different lights. His S2+ is using an SST-20 in 4000K and the blf 348 has a 219C in 5000K. So they are much closer in cri and color temperature than Maukka’s earlier lights. This explains why they both read so closely to spec.
Since your setup for high cri and NW, I would say your reading the lower end of the spectrum and are fine for WW and NW. If you measure low cri CW I would subtract about 5%. I think this is the number we found using the HS1010A like you have.
OK, I just ordered lights. Thank You “maukka” for your hard work and dedication providing us with these Calibration Lights.
Now I need a suggestion on plans to build a lumen tube.
Thanks ” shirnask “. I looked thru some of it and no luck yet finding the details. Not sure it matters if the joints were caulked and the inside painted with some flat reflective paint or just wiped with acetone to take the shine off the inside. Would a 6” pipe change readings. Things like that. I will keep reading thru it, not finished yet. I like the one MADMAX had in his video, it was 6”, probably do a tread on it soon.
After a little break from the lumen measuring game, I have binned the crappy old lumen tube I made, and built myself an integrating sphere.
One 25cm polystyrene ball from Amazon and about an hour of my time later, and this is what I have crafted:
What the photos don’t show is some paper over the inside of the entry holes to bring the light level down a bit, as higher powered torches were saturating my meter.
It does appear that my meter’s accuracy is biased toward cool white as previously discussed, but when using the correction factor from my calibration S2+ for CW lights the figures appear spot on:
For warmer lights the correction factor from my calibration BLF 348 (0.07) was too low. I have considered a few lights which have consistent “known” lumen outputs and decided that a CF of 0.094 appears to work for now. This gives me the following:
That looks pretty similar to a JoshK Sphere. You probably want a filler panel that can go around your smaller lights and has a reflective panel to keep light in.
Mine is only good for about 900-1000 lumen before the meter gets saturated, but you can use a neutral density filter for higher powered lights.
I’ve actually been using some foam that I’ve cut to shape to stuff in the input hole which I use for small lights but just didn’t photograph it.
I have used some white paper over the holes to reduce the light saturation and might double up on it a couple more times. Is this acceptable as a cheaper (!) alternative to an ND filter?
White paper is probably fine but it will age and it’s not very durable. If you take care to keep it in good condition and not adjust it then it should be OK.
As JasonWW was trying to explain: Try white paper or foil on the underside of your foam and re-test a small light. I’d bet your readings will change some due to the foam absorbing some of the light instead of “integrating” it back into the sphere.