Budley Doright
Well-Known Member
Cover and roll Rex lol.
I'm saying if the conditions are right for both plants, which would need different environments, then yes.So what your basically saying is that If you grew 2 cutting from the same plant in different temps.. One being just above freezing and the other being a constant 75F that the end yield would be identical?.. Like I said I dont think you have grown enough to with out a doubt say that temps are not directly effecting how your plants grow or uptake water. You can do math formulas and read articles all day. But until you have definitive proof through your own experience, you dont really know.
I push for higher transpiration rates than nature can provide outside in the cold.Temp, at least in my garden, definitely slows down growth, the colder you go.
Common sense dictates, man made these maps for a reason.
View attachment 3587323
I'm just assumin your inside garden is replicatin a natural outside garden with optimal conditions, like me.
I don't think I've reinvented a wheel or done anything that hasn't been done before. I do this every year because I have to. I learned from doing research and applying theories. It was a success for me.Rex.
Your so fulla shit and it ain't all yours!
You ought to sit on your typing fingers and let others answer questions.........Your only burying yourself in your BS!
I mean I would care less if you gave quality answers.....But you don't!
As far as temps go.....EVERY book will put you at a range of 70-75F .
G. Green
Ed R.
J. Cervantes
Soma
DJ Short
The Rev.
Danny Danko
Sub Cool
ANY FUCKIN BODY that has written a book says to use a 70's area temp range!
Now why the hell do YOU think you've re-invented the wheel?
I never said that temperature "alone" is responsible for co2 intake. It sounds like you're going back on your previous statement and admitting that higher temps do increase co2 uptake (which was my original statement that you took out of context ).Show me a scientific article that specifically states that temperature alone is responsible for CO2 intake.
I'll wait.
Not admitting anything I haven't already said. A warmer air is a drier air, correct? A colder air is a moister air, correct?I never said that temperature "alone" is responsible for co2 intake. It sounds like you're going back on your previous statement and admitting that higher temps do increase co2 uptake (which was my original statement that you took out of context ).
I didn't drop my temperatures purposely but the setup was exactly the same; I had an 'open air' grow space in my garage where the temperatures were regulated by the temperature outside. During spring, summer, and into fall I had great results with yields just under 1 gpw. During winter however, my results were very poor because of the cold temperatures (see post #27).So, have any of you ran the same setup you run but purposely dropped the temp down to 50-55? Didn't think so.
Ok, 33 then. Personally, I try not to let it get that low in case it drops that 1 degree. A 5 degree buffer is more acceptable for me, but whatever.Yes there is and why did it go from 33 degrees to now 50 degrees? Try enriching a room with 1500 ppm of co2 at 50, it probably wouldn't have much of an effect at all.
I don't even like when my smart pots get below 65 really, but 50 (or as you were saying a few hours ago 33 degrees )? No way, I'd buy a heater asap.
Exactly what I'm saying. That's why you run a slightly higher humidity in 50 or 33. It doesn't have to hold more moisture but it CAN.And I don't know what you're saying warmer air is drier air? You'll have to clarify more, but... warmer air should have more moisture as it is able to hold more water. So 50 RH at 50 degrees has LESS water vapor in the air than 50 RH at 80 degrees.
Ok? That's not even comparable to indoor growing styles. It's all about ideal, right?I didn't drop my temperatures purposely but the setup was exactly the same; I had an 'open air' grow space in my garage where the temperatures were regulated by the temperature outside. During spring, summer, and into fall I had great results with yields just under 1 gpw. During winter however, my results were very poor because of the cold temperatures (see post #27).
You're going to have to show more than some dinky little seedling to prove you know better than science because right now you sound like a typical RIU-Ass-Clown spewing bullshit.
When someone says "there is no difference in growth between 50 and 80 degrees" (and then said 33 to 80 degrees ), it definitely seems that they are trying to say that cold temps are optimal. But if not, then I'm arguing for no reason. Of course I know that a plant will survive in cooler temps, although 33 I think may be pushing it.Cold temps are not optimum no obviously not as it's been said above everybody knows the optimum temp range for cannabis, but necessary no! This is the point Rex is attempting to make, other factors are more important, I myself spent a lot of time trying to raise temps worrying so much about optimum range but still never getting close, my tent runs between around 16c and 22c lights off and on, i managed to raise temps lights on and off but the drop when lights off we're much more drastic and this affected my plants more than the Low temps, therefor I now try harder to keep optimum humidity and airflow, my plants do fine, I wouldn't advice growing in cold temps if u can avoid it but the point to be made is it's not the end of the world