I look forward to you proving that point using single wavelength LEDs above and below 470nm; more specifically, 380 to 500nm. I could care less about green through red.
I look forward to YOU proving yourself wrong. From this exchange, I've learned that you'll believe yourself, but I'm happy to share data.
You'll also get 500-660nm. They matter, too, and the PARwise doesn't quite get those right.
Couldn't care less, not "could care..." You're making the point is that you have more cares to go.
So do you have some spare single-wavelength LEDs to set aside for the testing? Are they labeled according to advertised wavelength, according to the seller?
Yes.
Even then, how do we know your $3,000 scope is correctly calibrated? Do you have a calibrated light source? Dollar value doesn't mean calibration, and even less so if it's no longer NIST-linked.
The UPRtek shipped NIST tracable, but we don't know that it's accurate. Agreed. That's why I'll use the Hopoocolor and the UPRtek. And if you'd like, I'm happy to send the diodes to others who have the Hopoocolor. We can average all those readings out or pick those that support your views.
Here's another comparison. G5 XR15 Blue.
From this graph, I can see that the PARwise tells me there's some blue, orange/red, and some UV that doesn't actually exist. How can anyone tune a light to what they're after if you can't see the individual spectrum peaks?
The PARwise is a mediocre PAR meter with crappy spectrometer functionality. In the US, the $190 VBR PAR meter from
Amazon is less impacted by how it's held, measures dang near the same as an Apogee, and leaves you with $110 in your pocket. If you want a generally accurate spectrometer, the $650 Hopoocolor is my pick.
See...you got me engaging again.