Lol.About a pound.
What kind of lights do you have access to? CFL? HID?Huh?
Home Depot sells Cree LED "lightbulbs" (including PAR38 spots and floods). They produce 40% more light per watt. 10 year warranty.Ya i can get cfl
Those are the "equiv" watts to compare to an incandescent. Look at the actual watts.100w CFL and 100w cree both 1600 lumens just an example i dont remember the actual but you get the point.
yep i fully understand that, i guess im not explaining it to well. So if u grab a 100 equiv watt cfl and a 100 equiv watt cree and check their stats they will both produce the same amount of lumens, i thought the same thing one day until i actually went to buy some cree and realized it was a huge waste of money.Those are the "equiv" watts to compare to an incandescent. Look at the actual watts.
Even if an LED produces the same amount of lumens as a CFL bulb, it's still going to cost less if you plan on using that bulb long-term, as LEDs produce the highest lumens per watt and last the longest. That's why they're more expensive.yep i fully understand that, i guess im not explaining it to well. So if u grab a 100 equiv watt cfl and a 100 equiv watt cree and check their stats they will both produce the same amount of lumens, i thought the same thing one day until i actually went to buy some cree and realized it was a huge waste of money.
It sounds like you're comparing 100w equivalency, not the watts used to produce that equivalency. CFLs have 50-70 lumens per watt when new. XBD diodes are ~100 lumens per watt. Inside the diffusion globe they may be ~90. (The Crees come with a rubbery protective coating. Removing that increases the lumens by 10%.).yep i fully understand that,
any efficient lamp is good, u can just use CFL's for this project -Hey all I am starting my plants soon inside my house then moving them outside. What type of lighting is the best for starting them indoors?