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Cheap Light meter

I have some thing that looks very similar, but it‘s a different color.
Seems to work well for what it is, but mine has no bells nor whistles.

It measures in LUX and something else which I don’t recall because I never push that button.

It tells me that sun at noon, on a clear day in the foothills and in the summer is producing 69000 LUX, unfortunately I have nothing to compare that to for accuracy. But it’s less in the shade so I believe it. I really only use it as a point of reference, I will pull it out occasionally, but I honestly don’t use it much.
 
FWIW, the Photone app compared results very favorably to the Pulse Pro. Free vs $550 and free held it's own.
That was using an iphone 2 and paper filter, pretty much a dinosaur of a smart phone. If that rig can come within 100PPFD of whatever alien witchcraft technology is inside the Pulse, I'd bet any smart phone can get a reading accurate enough to make a good choice on light height or dimming using that app.
There may or may not be a small fee for your type of light/phone combo but it's only like around $6. I think all android is free but ios can require a fee.
 
Yes I've got one of those light meters it seems ideal, if it's accurate I mean?
Screenshot_20250724_232122_PPFD Meter.jpg
Screenshot_20250727_113428_PPFD Meter.jpg
Apparently using the uni t with the ppfd app it's within a few percent of the Apogee mq quantum meter, using your phones sensor it's meant to be within 10%
 
I have some thing that looks very similar, but it‘s a different color.
Seems to work well for what it is, but mine has no bells nor whistles.

It measures in LUX and something else which I don’t recall because I never push that button.

It tells me that sun at noon, on a clear day in the foothills and in the summer is producing 69000 LUX, unfortunately I have nothing to compare that to for accuracy. But it’s less in the shade so I believe it. I really only use it as a point of reference, I will pull it out occasionally, but I honestly don’t use it much.
I have a LUX meter as well. I use it to measure the light in one tent and set the other to match.

Yesterday at 3:30pm I took an outdoor measurement. IMG_5658.jpeg
IMG_5659.jpeg

That’s 93,500 & 94,400 LUX. Depending on how I angled the sensor.

At 10am the next morning it was overcast and smoky from forest fires. I got a range of readings from 65,700 to 68,800 LUX.IMG_5665.jpegIMG_5673.jpeg

Then again at noon yesterday, still cloudy and smoky. IMG_5678.jpeg
 
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I have a LUX meter as well. I use it to measure the light in one tent and set the other to match.

Yesterday at 3:30pm I took an outdoor measurement. View attachment 110175
View attachment 110176

That’s 93,500 & 94,400 LUX. Depending on how I angled the sensor.
I had something similar. It never worked right after using it in direct sunlight - then I read the instructions that said never do that. It still works, the readings are consistent, but 30% lower than my phone.
 
I had something similar. It never worked right after using it in direct sunlight - then I read the instructions that said never do that. It still works, the readings are consistent, but 30% lower than my phone.
I had the opposite problem. Phone apps weren’t consistent. The meter reads the same when tested in the same way.

The Photontek only went in 25% increments so it would read the same at each step. Don’t know if the reading is right but it is consistent. Plus Amazon let us keep it for free when I complained the advertised case wasn’t included. It’s a recommended meter at a couple of sites I used to check for equipment.

IMG_5717.jpeg

Site link here.

Another here.
 
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