I picked up a couple of led bulbs to try out today.
Here’s what I got:
GE Nighthawk 3000k rated at 3000 lumens
spotlight type, so I was able to rest it on my base and measure through the Mt09r sized opening
15600 lux at start w/ 0.20 multi=3120lumens
15400 lux at 30s w/ 0.20 multi=3080lumens
15300 lux at 3mins w/ 0.20 multi=3060lumens
14900 lux at 10mins w/ 0.20 multi=2980lumens
pretty close to spot on with the 0.20 multiplier
right on at 30s if I change the multi to 0.1948
GE refresh 5000k rated at 1600 lumens
regular bulb type, so I put it through a Q8 opening and pulled it upwards, allowing all the reflector to sit inside the sphere. This may have skewed the reading as there might have been a direct path past my pingpong ball baffles
10320 lux at start w/ 0.20 multi=2064lumens
10280 lux at 30s w/ 0.20 multi=2056lumens
10180 lux at 3mins w/ 0.20 multi=2036lumens
9700 lux at 10mins w/ 0.20 multi=1940lumens
a bit higher than I anticipated, based on rating…
using a bulb I had lying around (has hours on it, used from time to time):
slightly smaller bulb type, I put it inside the q8 opening and inserted it until the reflector was totally inside the sphere, but no further.
Sylvania 2700k rated at 1500 lumens
8350 lux at start w/ 0.20 multi=1670 lumens
8250 lux at 30s w/ 0.20 multi=1650 lumens
8160 lux at 3mins w/ 0.20 multi=1632 lumens
7950 lux at 10mins w/ 0.20 multi=1590 lumens
30s reading using the 0.1948 multi gives 1607lumens still - a bit brighter than I expected too
So my conclusion is that my sphere is reading high with the regular lightbulb types, as they likely send direct light to the sensor. With the nighthawk, it’s a spotlight type, with an aluminum heatsink to rest on the ring. It reads as a flashlight would.
If I take those readings as correct, my new multi is 0.1948 and the 30s reading from the nighthawk AC spotlight bulb is spot on.
Reference light testing for integrating sphere
The nighhawk looks a lot like a single emitter COB through the reflector.