BTT has no vested interest in CMH. That's a serious stretch.
You seem to be missing my point. If a 630w double-bulb CMH achieves (weight and quality-wise) what a 1000w Gavita does (as claimed by some in the 315w CMH thread), the Gavita is not a 'better' or more efficient fixture. It consumes ~30% more electricity, generates ~1/3 more heat. To be correct with that assessment you'd need to be pulling in 1/3 more weight than a person with a 630w CMH, and... I seriously doubt that is happening. This is assuming quality is a given with a dialed-in feeding regimen.
Understand that I don't have any CHM fixtures. yet. I am re-designing my entire scene and the 630w CMH potentially looks like a great option (aside from the steep initial investment). I am open to other types like the Gavitas, but the feedback that I am getting from friends in the field is that they are overhyped and overrated. So here I am investigating it further.
As far as lower bud development goes, I think you are possibly a bit confused about how plants actually process energy via photosynthesis and distribute it to the entire plant rather than just the tops which are exposed to the most light. A few years ago on another forum this was discussed in detail and a side by side was done where the lower buds were actually screened from direct light on half of a plant... and they developed just as well as the buds that weren't screened. The only difference was that they were slightly lighter green. Density was the same.
I realize that this is anecdotal, but that result matches what I have seen over 20 years of growing. Some strains are definitely prone to looser lower buds, but it has little to do with the actual light intensity down there provided the plant itself is being hit with full intensity at the canopy top.
I find it highly unlikely that a CMH would have such an insufficient penetration that it would measurably negatively affect lower flower development.
Firstly, I simply asked if Beta had a vested interest. That's not an unfair question in my eyes considering the content of his many prior posts.
With the CMH as described, you don't have a 630w fixture, you have a fixture with two 315w bulbs. That greatly affects output intensity vs. an actual 630w bulb.
As far as lower flower development goes, I am not at all confused as to how photosynthesis works. You are correct that flowers will develop seemingly fine in shaded conditions. However, it has been my experience that those same flowers - subjected to more direct light - are superior in all respects to their shaded brethren. The miniature chemical factories knows as resin glands alter their chemical reactions based on light received. That is personal experience, no science to back it. Nonetheless, commercial growers routinely prune their tightly packed plants in an effort to get more light down to these lower flowers. They claim better yield and a more uniform finished product from these efforts. That is my finding as well.