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230 points mgh2 | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0.557s | source
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Aurornis ◴[] No.45153756[source]
This is a topic where the details matter a lot. A sunscreen which is labeled SPF 50 but performs at SPF 45 is such a minimal difference that it would be impossible to notice in the real world. The variance of your application technique and applied thickness would actually matter more. There is also a lot of testing variability, so if a sunscreen rated to block 98% of certain rays only gets 97% in the test that would be acceptable in the real world, but it would get counted for this clickbait headline.

If a sunscreen comes with a high SPF rating and performs close enough in random testing (which is hard to replicate) then I wouldn’t have any concerns in the real world.

The body of the article has some more details about how the number of majorly deficient brands was much smaller, but that makes for less clickbaity headlines:

> The measured sunscreen efficacy of 4 models were below SPF15, of which 2 were sunscreen products with very high protection i.e. labelled with SPF50+

Knowing which 2 brands were labeled SPF 50 but performed below 15 would have been helpful, but the article is not helpful.

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1. manwe150 ◴[] No.45154691[source]
I assume your numbers are just made up, but if 98% is SPF 50 (1/50 or 2% reaches the skin), 97% is SPF 30 (1/30 or 3% reaches the skin). Both seem pretty good, but that is still a fairly marked difference.
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2. cenamus ◴[] No.45155585[source]
Yeah that would be like 50% more sun getting to your skin