PicklesRus
Well-Known Member
I was thinking the same thing, should we be going cheap or quality.these would probably work for lettuce. The 4 pack works out to 288 watts at the wall (so they say)
http://www.ebay.com/itm/4x-108W-LED-Grow-Light-Bar-Strip-Fixture-Full-Spectrum-Red-Blue-For-Hydro-Plant-/131779851104?hash=item1eaeb0f360:g:bc4AAOSw4shX4jCn
I know this challenge is suppose to be growing lettuce under cobs, but I think it could be viewed as the most cost effective way to grow it. I think inexpensive light arrays in larger quantities might be a worth looking at, akin to a RAID (redundant array of inexpensive disks). something like 20 - 22 watt lights at $6 dollars a light($120), vs 8 - 54 watt lights at $120 each ($960). if you scaled this up, you could get 160 cheap lights for the same price as 8 expensive lights. Basically making them disposable, like rockwool. I suppose, one could argue that better lights make for better lettuce, while probably true, is it a big differnce, or just a slight difference, and does it really matter when you toss it in ranch dressing?
I guess it's worth a test.
From what I've seen the philips production modules are running at good efficiency but are kind of pricey and deter people due to the cost.
If the cheap disposable as you refer to them work that's definitely an option for a hobby. I'm a big ran of trying the ultra cheap stuff as I think there's a lot of value there.
I sent off 10 or so email requests to alibaba sellers yesterday asking for spec sheets on their light bars. The newer light bars being sold out of china look nice - I don't know if looks equal good design but theres hope for the future I think.
As far as the ultra cheap ones though I think they might be not as efficient on electricity - not that it really matters I guess. I wonder what the lifespan is on them.