Ultimate LED Bulbs - Ultra High CRI - The Honorable Quest

Below is my latest product (Bridgelux THRIVE 7W GU10 TIR optics) . Sorry, but I am quite a busy man and currently do not have time to translate. I will make a description in free time and maybe send some samples to Maukka :innocent:
https://www.swiatelka.pl/viewtopic.php?f=57&t=25080

Very nice Bocian! I’d live to see an e26 base omnidirectional bulb too!

Nice.
Are you measured pulsations in your lamps ?
What driver you used ?

The same driver as here but with a higher current set:
https://budgetlightforum.com/t/-/51820
Unfortunately, there is very little space in the GU10 mount for the power supply. I like drivers with a power factor correction and high efficiency ~ 90% as been used in this product. There are available small drivers with a fast output 40-60kHz but they have a PF ~ 0.5 and an efficiency between 70-80% (more heat generated in the power supply system = much shorter product life).

In my area the majority of new houses use recessed LED lights with no “bulb”.

I certainly hope there is opportunity for ultra high CRI in this market because it feels like the little guy here is going to have less and less market share as time goes on.

Here is example electrical parameters measurement for new 7W GU10 THRIVE. As You can see there is only 0,85W power wasted on driver heating up. I also modify by myself factory condition drivers by adding NTC thermistor (soft start) and additional capacity on output (low impedance, long life capacitor) and it takes really long years to dried them up till malfunction.

Hello,

I saw in the top of the thread that Optisolus LEDs were the best. I have found white LED strips pre-made based on this model. You can find them here:
http://www.us.lumistrips.com/lumistrips-plug-play-led-en-intl/linearz-optisolis-nichia-led-modules-cri98-zhaga-2800-lm-m-us.html

I understand there are a few people with the equipment to test the light quality. I may be willing to send them a sample to test for the benefit of all, as I also would like to have a known good quality light for my photography of artwork.

Thanks

While I can understand the reasons for this, without a doubt this is considered commercial and thus belongs in the Commercial Seller's Spot forum. :-)

Concerning the nickname… could be nicer.

I bought a 10 W 806 lumen Mueller-Licht E27 bulb here in Germany for a Euro. They claim to be CRI >95. Is this realistic?

Why not? How do you define “realistic”? …

The short answer is it can be. Led emitters of higher CRI aren't more expensive to develop or manufacture. The actual reason behind low CRI leds still being the norm is because of the race for luminous efficacy, to boast higher lumen figures of “light which resembles white light”. Actual natural white light, as a blackbody radiator or sun's spectra, cannot be obtained with the highest efficacies because it encompasses many frequencies which the eye is not very sensitive to or sensitive at all. High CRI leds' spectra resembles white light in what is considered the visible spectrum (sources: Visible spectrum @Wikipedia, Efficiency of LEDs: The highest luminous efficacy of a white LED @ dial.de), still with some cutbacks.

Concerning the quality of the electronic components in the above lamp or its heatsinking capacity and average working temperature (which impacts lifespan), that is another story.

Mon, 05/31/2021 - 13:54

Thanks. That is immensely helpful.

I just purchased a new batch of this bulb and the DUV is pretty bad. It starts out at 0.0025 and goes down to about 0.0010 after an hour. Does anyone have any recommendations for high CRI GU10 bulbs that are below the BBL?

I solved the duv issue by cutting 1/8 or 1/4 minus green Lee filters and attaching it to the GU10 bulbs with a tiny piece of double sided tape at the center!

Anyone measured the 95 CRI bulbs from TCP? They are really cheap, eg FA19D6027E26SFR95

Hey fellas!

I'm new to this forum, I actually stumbled across this place because of this thread.

I did see the beginning of the thread that has a chart with some high CRI chips, I was wondering if there's a list of available US bulbs for home use that have very high CRI, and also if if there's any strips(flex or rigid may both work) that utilize very high CRI chips.

I have a couple projects, one I'm just wanting to update my home lighting because I'm not satisfied with the CREE bulbs(although they are way better than the GE Reveal bulbs they replaced due to terrible lifespan).

The other project is what I need strips for, I want to experiment making my own grow light setup using very high CRI chips and compare that to a high grade LED grow light. Grow light manufacturers are obsessed with efficiency and quality definitely comes as a lower priority...this makes sense because most indoor growers are growing cannabis and being profitable is their main goal. I am going to be growing peppers and vegetables and I am more focused on light quality, I am thinking the closer I can get to mimicking the sun's spectrum the healthier and faster the plants will grow. I know the efficiency of the higher CRI LEDs that have a violet emitter and/or additional phosphors will obviously not be as good as the chips made for horticulture. I won't pretend I know much about this stuff yet, so if I'm mistaken please let me know.

Has anyone here done a similar project, or have any tips or products you would recommend?

I know I have a lot of learning to do, but I like the idea of that. This site has so much information it's hard to know where to get started!

Thanks,

- Dustin

This is the best LED bulb I’ve found so far, use the Translate function in Chrome.

https://item.taobao.com/item.htm?id=654264933998

Pretty pricy, I got a couple on order.

How are these better than sunlike?

Check out the spectrum, they are even closer to blackbody spectrum than sunlike. The same store also sell bulbs with the same chip as sunlike too at https://item.taobao.com/item.htm?id=585513116587 that’s their previous generation bulbs.

First of all, efficiency ≠ efficacy. Luminous efficacy @ Wikipedia.

The fact that an average human being does not perceive all frequencies of visible light with the same sensitivity, along with the “race for lemons” is the reason we have a plethora of “lesser white light” leds or low CRI leds. But enough with the slight off-topic…

Check “sunlight spectrum” and “full spectrum” at Guangzhou Juhong Optoelectronics, had it in my list of sellers. Proposed a review of these to the usual testers long ago around here, but guess there was no interest somewhere.

I think I have a couple 4000K & 5000K “sunlight spectrum” output spectrum files somewhere in my desktop computer, they were published long ago by some eastern europe buyer in the AliExpress product reviews section, and I downloaded them. They had infrareds. Will check later.

Sat, 09/11/2021 - 22:50

I forgot to ask earlier, and I know this may be a really silly question...is it possible to make my own strips? I have a feeling that to do this I'd need some very specialized equipment so it's probably not feasible, but it's still worth a shot if it's possible. I have a Hakko soldering station lol...does anyone make their own strips here?

I think a good starting place would be to have at least 800W of power over a 4x4 area for the grow light, and I'd probably have to build it and measure the setup with a Apogee quantum sensor to get a good idea if 800w would be enough to hit PPFD of 1000μmol/s.m² at a reasonable height over the plant canopy. I suspect that since the spectrum is so broad for high CRI light sources that you can actually push higher PPFD than light sources that have a lot of peaks/inconsistencies in spectral output. The way PPFD and grow lights in general are measured, all photons within the PAR zone are counted as equal, and knowing this I'm thinking that when a typical LED light that has a peaky light spectrum "burns" plants by being too intense, the light is probably too intense in certain wavelengths and if the spectrum was more even than they could handle higher flux density. Just a wild ass guess on my part, and it's something wanting to test as well.