R
Roddy
Guest
LOL PawPaw, If you're throwing ideal spectrum at a plant that isn't feeling it, you're just wasting time, money and good beans! Not trying to irk you, my friend, just trying to help.
pawpaw said:Just as lumens don't mean squat if they are in the wrong part of the spectrum.
pawpaw said:The first graphic below shows the relation between wave-length and relative photosynthetic activity. I have superimposed that response curve over what I call the "wrong spectrum" and both LPS and MH spectrums which shows why the latter two are not wrong though not ideal. The photo synthetic inefficiency of the LPS is especially exaggerated because the PAR graph is relative. It's actual inefficiency is closer to 50% which is to say that half the lumens produced by a LPS bulb are wasted.
pawpaw said:Yea, but its spectrum is more complicated and to say anything acurate about its efficiency I would, for starters, have to take a difference between the definite integral of its curve and the PAR curve but the bulb's curve is not continuous over its range and therefore not analytic-- so I cheated to make my point
pawpaw said:Yea, but its spectrum is more complicated and to say anything acurate about its efficiency I would, for starters, have to take a difference between the definite integral of its curve and the PAR curve but the bulb's curve is not continuous over its range and therefore not analytic-- so I cheated to make my point
Growdude said:You do know that the info you presented was on a LPS light not a HPS light?
My advice is dont get 'hooked" by PAR, so far nothing beats a HPS for flowering.
I get nice results useing a combo of mostly hps, and some MH, that way you get the blue end of the spectrum, and you get the orange end of the spectrum outta the HPS. As far as increasing the intensity,the obvious of course, the lower the light the more intense. So buy a good fan for your air cooled reflector, and increase the intensity.For every foot away your lights are, you lose a tremendous amt of energy that is needed for photosynthesis to take place.Growdude said:You do know that the info you presented was on a LPS light not a HPS light?
My advice is dont get 'hooked" by PAR, so far nothing beats a HPS for flowering.
Hamster Lewis said:I just don't see T5's getting it done penetration wise. I will stick with HPS for flowering and let T5's handle the veg. Jmo
The Hemp Goddess said:I don't want to sound like a ****, but why did you invest so much into LEDs without knowing how they would work? I only ask this because you seem quite intelligent--far smarter than I am...
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