Advantage V. disadvantage CFL's

ceestyle

Well-Known Member
I don't think that CFL's are good only for small grows.. Mine is 12x6 and i've got 18 plants now, with another 12 going in tonight in a modified SOG. As to yield,6 plants..9.5 oz..another plant1.25 lbs..All under CFL. As for temp, even with the CFL's..I'm running 27 150w 2700K bulbs and my temp is from75 at the floor to 95 at ceiling, so unless those Hp are outdoors or in a large room how does it stay so cool? The largest area of savings is in the elecric bill, mine only went up 15 bucks after I switched the entire house to cfl's. No way could I run 4000 watts of HP or MH..Oh yeah..those weights are of Sativa, which does not yeild as much per plant as Indica. As important as the lghts are, the feed plays a huge part in yeild as well.

"between the ditches..below the radar"
Yeah, but the point is that you can get the same light output from less total watts of HID. CFLs produce just as much heat.
 

lastfrontier

Well-Known Member
yep you get the same BTU's from each watt no matter how you slice it HID or CFL i love it for growing 20-15 at the most not saying that is all it can do i love it over my 600 watt MH/HPS with digital ballast but my CFL light can go as high as 2400 watts i normally run it at 750 watts to replace my 600 watt HID i get better results with my CFL but you can see that the CFL hood runs a bit hotter with a 150 more watts but i still think it is better i think it provides for more light coverage it runs about one inch from the canopy and the heat is spread even over the whole crop.
 

ceestyle

Well-Known Member
yep you get the same BTU's from each watt no matter how you slice it HID or CFL i love it for growing 20-15 at the most not saying that is all it can do i love it over my 600 watt MH/HPS with digital ballast but my CFL light can go as high as 2400 watts i normally run it at 750 watts to replace my 600 watt HID i get better results with my CFL but you can see that the CFL hood runs a bit hotter with a 150 more watts but i still think it is better i think it provides for more light coverage it runs about one inch from the canopy and the heat is spread even over the whole crop.
not exactly. you get the same heat energy for every watt wasted. CFLs are less efficient at turning electricity into light, and therefore more of it actually goes into heat than with HIDs.
 

lorenzo08

Well-Known Member
not exactly. you get the same heat energy for every watt wasted. CFLs are less efficient at turning electricity into light, and therefore more of it actually goes into heat than with HIDs.

that is why they are better for small ops or for beginners. but, that doesn't mean they aren't any good for slightly bigger grows too.

do what works best for you, and don't judge others. not directed at anyone, but just in case someone fights cfl's
 

lorenzo08

Well-Known Member
so does no one use black cfl lights? I've read that uv is great for thc production. are they not worth it?

400 posts! maybe one day I'll be able to say "I'm not a noob"
 

lastfrontier

Well-Known Member
my hood is a great radiant and really removes and distributes heat well so the small bit of extra heat is welcome it helps things not mildew or rot i have tried using black light both mixed and stand alone and i feel alone they did not grow well mixed saw no change i think that CFL can become to big and the up keep would not be worth it but CFL's are great for the newb and the veteran they are so versitle and provide great coverage with the right reflector but i do use 150 more watts in my CFL hood
 

ceestyle

Well-Known Member
I have read a peer-reviewed study that states specifically d9-THC and no other CBDs in medical-grade marijuana was increased with UV light. It's therefore as good as fact.
 

ceestyle

Well-Known Member
noob question..: is that a good or bad thing?
Good. THC gets you high. Cannabinoids give you couch lock. They also have medicinal benefits, but I prefer less CBD and more THC. THC also breaks down into other CBDs over time and in the presence of light.
 

lorenzo08

Well-Known Member
Good. THC gets you high. Cannabinoids give you couch lock. They also have medicinal benefits, but I prefer less CBD and more THC. THC also breaks down into other CBDs over time and in the presence of light.
do I understand you right, uv light increases d9-THC and not CBD? I'll read more about it some time when I get around to it.

+rep if I could. gotta spread the love first
 

sessBaG

Active Member
what kind of CFLs are those just regular ones or like growing CFLs? and how many watts per bulb
let me know sessBaG
 

alka

Active Member
not exactly. you get the same heat energy for every watt wasted. CFLs are less efficient at turning electricity into light, and therefore more of it actually goes into heat than with HIDs.
what last frontier is saying is that a 100 watt hid produces the exact same heat as 100 watt CFL or a 100 watt hid. Doesn't matter what your system as far as total heat produced by that unit is concerned. Cfl's spread the heat over a much larger area than hid but thats about it.
 

alka

Active Member
this is including heat energy produced by the light itself. It should theoretically all be the same.
 

ceestyle

Well-Known Member
this is including heat energy produced by the light itself. It should theoretically all be the same.
Not exactly. 100W is the power taken by each of the bulbs. Some of it is converted to light. Some of it is wasted as heat, primarily through inefficiency of the ballast.

SO:

100W = X Watts Light + Y Watts Heat

If the HID produces more light with the same power - and it does - you're wasting the remaining power on heat. Only a fraction of the light is infrared (heat), and does not directly result in the heating of the plant.
 

alka

Active Member
Not exactly. 100W is the power taken by each of the bulbs. Some of it is converted to light. Some of it is wasted as heat, primarily through inefficiency of the ballast.

SO:

100W = X Watts Light + Y Watts Heat

If the HID produces more light with the same power - and it does - you're wasting the remaining power on heat. Only a fraction of the light is infrared (heat), and does not directly result in the heating of the plant.

annnnnddd.. what happens when that light hits something or the plant uses it for photosynthesis? It gets converted ultimately back to heat. Anything electric that expends its energy within a closed system ALWAYS has one hundred percent conversion back to heat.
 

lorenzo08

Well-Known Member
annnnnddd.. what happens when that light hits something or the plant uses it for photosynthesis? It gets converted ultimately back to heat. Anything electric that expends its energy within a closed system ALWAYS has one hundred percent conversion back to heat.
some of the energy is converted into sugar in the plant
 

ceestyle

Well-Known Member
annnnnddd.. what happens when that light hits something or the plant uses it for photosynthesis? It gets converted ultimately back to heat. Anything electric that expends its energy within a closed system ALWAYS has one hundred percent conversion back to heat.
I'm sorry, that's not correct. As someone has pointed out, the whole point of providing the plant with light is that it converts it to chemical energy, namely through the construction of other molecules that provide the plant with energy. The only reason this produces heat is if the energy of the photons is above that required to initiate one of these reactions, in which case it is turned into vibrational or translational modes in these molecules, which we observe as heat.

Besides that, it is also reflected and absorbed elsewhere in the growing environment, and much more efficiently dispersed through conduction and convection than that produced by the ballast and bulb.

You're right about one thing: energy is conserved. The idea is to get as much of that energy as possible to the plant in a usable form, which we call radiation or light - of bite sizes just large enough for the plant to digest.
 

alka

Active Member
holy crap guys... someone other than me just try it! If you expend x amount of energy in a room regardless of the source you will need x amount of ventilation because x amount of thermal energy is ultimately made...

Yes some of the energy is directly used in the plants growth but not enough to calculate it into a design of a ventilation system. I guess to really find out you would have to let a plant die and decay and calculate the release of that energy as it decomposes... it wouldn't amount to a hell of a lot..

(100 watts), Btu/hour= Watts x 3.413 = 341 Btu/hour are produced in a hundred watt grow room. period. You really think the plants can even start to make a dent on this?

you may be right..ceestyle.. those sure are long words... but this is my experience.
 
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