So this might get lost in the Par rental thread. Just wanted to post up my test I did today.
I rented the Apogee 210 from BRS and it came in today. Someone also mentioned you can use a cheap LUX meter to get par as well by taking the LUX and divide by 60.
I bought this meter
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B018QLIVSC/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o03_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
I took all my PAR readings with the Apogee unit I rented first.
Then i put the LUX meter in ziplock bag and tried to hold the bag as tight as I could against the sensor to try and get a accurate reading.
At first I tried the divide by 60 and the number was WAY low. So tried a few more divisions and found using 30 was pretty much spot on with the Apogee.
Here is the numbers I got. the red are from the Apogee and the green are the LUX meter divided by 30. I checked the number a few times in each spot and the readings came back +- 10lux on the unit so close enough. I had the unit set in M mode of 20,000 LUX since my numbers didnt go above that. you may need to set it to 200,000 if you have lights turned up more.
Now this is doing it under a Radion Gen2 pro with the Diffuser panel. I am not sure if would get same results with other lights but this would probably get anyone in the ball park of PAR numbers I think.
par levels by jon duboy, on Flickr
I rented the Apogee 210 from BRS and it came in today. Someone also mentioned you can use a cheap LUX meter to get par as well by taking the LUX and divide by 60.
I bought this meter
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B018QLIVSC/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o03_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
I took all my PAR readings with the Apogee unit I rented first.
Then i put the LUX meter in ziplock bag and tried to hold the bag as tight as I could against the sensor to try and get a accurate reading.
At first I tried the divide by 60 and the number was WAY low. So tried a few more divisions and found using 30 was pretty much spot on with the Apogee.
Here is the numbers I got. the red are from the Apogee and the green are the LUX meter divided by 30. I checked the number a few times in each spot and the readings came back +- 10lux on the unit so close enough. I had the unit set in M mode of 20,000 LUX since my numbers didnt go above that. you may need to set it to 200,000 if you have lights turned up more.
Now this is doing it under a Radion Gen2 pro with the Diffuser panel. I am not sure if would get same results with other lights but this would probably get anyone in the ball park of PAR numbers I think.
par levels by jon duboy, on Flickr
