Thanks for the info/post, and opinions on the light---I hope it works out for you----as far as jumping on the "next best thing" a lot more testing needs to be done---a lot of factors to consider---You should do some side by side tests and really see what the facts are. Could be great--------could be a fart in the wind. Thank you again and best of luck with your research.Greetings fellow weed growers and lovers! I'm new here but not new to other forums. I've seen a ton of noobs asking about lighting and all anyone has to say is HPS, MH, Floro or LED. Time to stir some shit up and help some of you out and get you out of the dark ages.
LEDs won't be refined for a couple of years, I've seen grows fail, I tried them myself as supplemental lighting, and for clones. To say the least, I wasn't impressed. They need work, they may be the best thing out there at some point but for now, you're better off with floros in my opinion.
HPS lights are great for flowering and for you noobs out there, YES you can veg under them too! Every post about lighting here seems to tell people that you NEED MH for vegging and HPS for flowering, THEY ARE WRONG! I've had grows with just MH. While HPS is better for flowering, But there is something better then both of those bulb even if you pay the jacked up price for the "super duper specially enhanced king of all" version of either of those bulbs.
Forget all of those OVERPRICED "enhanced" horticulture bulb for both MH and HPS. People get hung up on how many watts and how many Lumens without understanding what they are for. It's advertising, it's sales, it's all about exaggerating something and making it seem more important than what they can be used as. The news does the same thing every night, exaggerates the story to get viewers to increase sales. I'll let you know now, I'll put a 400 watt CMH bulb up against their 600 watt "enhanced bulb" and embarrass them all, as for a 400 watt enhanced bulb it doesn't even come close.
Take a look at the comparison on the light spectrum chart, it doesn't take a expert to see the difference.
All of that and check out the second picture....... yeah, that bulb is lit and being held. The bulbs run that much cooler then HPS and MH bulbs. No air cooling hood needed! most of the heat goes vertical on the bulbs.
And check out the pics of the grows. As you see, they are different grows, the bulb is proven.
These bulbs run about $50
They work on standard HPS ballasts of the same wattage
They run much cooler which put them closer to the plants and makes them much more effective.
They range in watts up to 400 watts. there is no 600 or 1000 watt out there right now but they are coming.
Not for digital ballasts, they require a hard strike to fire up.
There's endless advantages to these bulbs.
Got Questions? Comments? Sarcasm? Hit me with it.
That's funny, I seem to see that MH conversions get about 36-37k , compared to 39 quoted with the CMH. Considering the amount of useless or overweighted spectrum with the CMH, you're probably getting more useful light with the MH.Conversion bulbs have been around forever, but they're crap. MH conversion is anemic, I would run a CMH and get some real light instead of a conversion.
First of all, it's simple enough to respond without being a dick. I clearly stated that I am not an expert on CMH.ceestyle, you must be stoned, or don't know how to read, your link shows the MH lamp STARTS at 32,000 in the horizontal position, but due to lumen degradation goes downhill fast. I've tried a conversion lamp, and the plant just goes yellow and shrivels up.
there is no useless spectrum on a CMH, just compare to the photosynthesis action spectrum, and it's a perfect match.
It seems to me from this spectrum that CMH is much heavier on green and the colors that lumens are weighted to more heavily than HPS is. Compare those to the luminosity function, and you'll see that the maximum of the black curve is centered in a region (~550nm) where the CMH spectrum is heavy and flat. I think you'd have to work the math out on that to say anything, which means it's not a trivial point.Ceramic metal halide has an extremely shallow lumen degradation, has excellent maintained lumens. Also CMH has loads of red. What I am talking about is optimizing, because obviously when the plants are small, they just can't physically use all the photons from a 58,000 lumen 400w lamp, but what we are not taking into account, is that HPS is very high in lumens AS AN ARTEFACT OF HOW LUMENS ARE MEASURED, which is green and yellow photons are weighted very high, whereas blue and red photons, to which THE EYE is less sensitive to, BUT CHLOROPHYLL IS MORE SENSITIVE TO, means that TOTAL PHOTONS, is probably very similar. Remember, how a CMH lamp is made: they just take an HPS lamp, and SPIKE IT WITH RARE METALS, to make it give off lots more blue and red, which IS PERFECT FOR WHAT WE WANT AS POTGROWERS!!! Peace, and sorry to be a dick on my last comment, but you posted the completely wrong lumens.
proving what?So how would one go about proving this without going broke buying special equipment?
Rent it. (damn 10 char lower limit)So how would one go about proving this without going broke buying special equipment?
you can convert all the spectra using software i have ... but it would be a huge PIA for little end benefit. If I had any interest in CMH, I might consider it.Rent it. (damn 10 char lower limit)
BTW - for the record, the Retro-white stats are given for the vertical, base-up position, so the stats are comparable. You must be stoned too. Apparently if you're reading this ... well, you can read.ceestyle, you must be stoned, or don't know how to read, your link shows the MH lamp STARTS at 32,000 in the horizontal position, but due to lumen degradation goes downhill fast. I've tried a conversion lamp, and the plant just goes yellow and shrivels up.
there is no useless spectrum on a CMH, just compare to the photosynthesis action spectrum, and it's a perfect match.
The way this actually should work is this - all the spectra given for bulbs, e.g. here, are given in relative units. And no, it's not adjusted for lumens - it's the raw spectrum, but normalized to 100% intensity at the maximum. You therefore must multiple by the normalized photopic spectrum to find the spectrum that they used to calculate lumens, integrate the area under the curve, and find a scaling factor. Using that, you can scale the raw spectrum, multiply times the normalized PAR spectrum, and integrate to find PAR watts. That is, of course, after you have digitized all of the spectra. Go for it.Really google is your friend.
Where you need to go is google on converting spectrum to lumens.
There is one curve for plant lumens, and another curve for human lumens. The lumens given by the manufacturer of the lamp is for humans. But there is a HUGE difference between plant and human lumens, so the only way to find out the number, is to take the measured spectrum, and then do the mathematical thing called multiply the curve by the normalized chart. This is given on the following site. As you can see, Towards a Plant Growth Lumen
shows the following chart:
Okay, well now we're speaking the same language. I just didn't really know what point exactly you were getting at ...Basically, the bottom line is that it is not possible to beat HPS, HPS has them all beat, but for the early growing periods, like the first half of the grow, I would use a GE CMH because of the beneficial effect on PLANT MORPHOLOGY, setting up the basic structure and skeleton of the plant, is better with CMH. Or you could use a pulse start metal halide for the first half of the grow, which would be just as good, since the blue component is important in the formative stages of plant growth. Towards the end we are just "fattening up" the plant, with piles of THC, just like a farmer fattens up the cattle, after they have had their mother's milk during the first part of their lives. The CMH is like mother's milk, and the HPS is like the grain feedlot. Peace, Sativa.
750 .000 .032
You know, that's a good question. I have found a number of PAR curves that look like this and this , but I have also seen a few that look like this, which would be consistent with green being much less useful for plants. I have yet to unearth a concrete source besides the book cited in the last article (which of course I do not own) which cites one of these with proper units. I assume that the two first references and all like it are in energy, while the second type is in photon flux, but converting using the wavelength does not result in the PAR spectrum heavy in green that we normally see.Hey Cee,
I keep hearing that plants don't use/can't see green. But every one of the PAR curves I look at (they all seem to look the same) do not drop off for green. In fact, its higher in the green then the blue.
Just wondering on your thoughts about it.
Well put. Thanks for the discussion. The article you posted has a couple useful refs that I requested above. I'll take a look at those.The point I was getting at was:
1. You made me do some research and I came up with a useful article not yet quoted, but demonstrates for sure what a PAR curve looks like, from an academic source, and not a commercial lamp salesman source, and real numbers that show how to convert a spectrum into plant lumens.
2. That you made me do the research for myself, that would suggest that for the formative stages of plant growth (vegetative and early flowering), that CMH would be suitable, probably more than an HPS, and likely is superior to an MH conversion, and probably even superior to a pulse start metal halide. The difference between CMH and a pulse start metal halide is not much, except the spectrum shows the CMH output extending way out into the far red, so I suspect it has better plant lumens than a PSMH.
3. This article basically settles the debate, because the article shows actual numbers for plant lumens per watt, and HPS has 'em all beat, so for fattening up the plant, like livestock in a feedlot, use HPS.
4. There is however, an opinion that blue and violet light simulates high altitudes, and may increase potency. If you are of that opinion, consider supplementing your HPS with CMH towards the end of flowering, like the last 6 weeks. Example: for a 3x5 foot closet or grow area, two 400w HPS and a central 400w CMH might be appropriate. Someone from earlier on said that more light is always better. Even though the GE lamp costs almost twice as much, it lasts longer, has a lower color temperature so is richer in reds, and has a higher output, so that is the one I would use. If you subscribe to this belief, for example you could veg with one 400w CMH for four weeks. Flower for two weeks with 2 400w HPS. Complete four more weeks of flowering with 2 x hps and 1 x cmh.
4. I must have had too much coffee when I said you were stoned, my apologies.
Peace and out. Sativa.