I understand you are using the word "ideal" but that means that a 5x5 grow area during flowering would need 250,000 lumens a 1000w hps typically only gives off about 140,000 lumens and I think you would be hard pressed to find anyone using more than 1000w hps in an area this size, and your suggesting almost double. 3k for vegging seems about right that is about perfect for a 400w in a 4x4. Keep in mind though that this is in the ideal situation and most people are not going to be able to replicate this in smaller indoor grow spaces. My best advice is to use your judgement, and understand that the more light you use (assuming you can keep the temps under control) the better your ladies will do. Good luck with the rest of your research and your grow.lumens =l ight intensity
more = better
3,000 per square foot for veg
10,000 per square foot flowering
those are the ideal outputs
So if I'm using a 480W driver should I divide that by 30 to find the ideal area?I think the standard, or rule of thumb, is 30 watts for every square foot of grow space.
nice!!! got it.Hello, Pedro.
Nothing like reviving a 10-year-old thread.
You are correct on both questions. What I believe we are trying to determine is how 'much' light we need to get to the intensities to grow some dank. Using power levels will allow you to calculate how much light if you know how efficient the source is at converting electricity into photons. Most HID and older leds will need approx 50w/ sq ft but as you get into current tech leds the power level can be dropped down to 30-35w/ sq ft because of the increased efficiency.
It's 50.I think the standard, or rule of thumb, is 30 watts for every square foot of grow space.
The most accurate method would be knowing the PAR output of the light. It's measured in micro moles(umole) of photons. Then you could use that number to see how much area it will effectively illuminate. PPFD(density) uses square meters for area. Anything over 600 PPFD is ok.nice!!! got it.
so if I have a 480w driver with 50% efficiency, I should build a tent with (480*0,5)/30 = 8 sq ft (using leds)
how bad would be 25w/sq ft?
It would be smoke'n hot at 50% efficiency. Meanwell HLG drivers are around 89-94% depending on the exact model and operating voltage. About 3% better on 240Volts as I recall. Tell use the LED you plan to use and we can give more specific advice. Also, I suggest posting in the LED section.nice!!! got it.
so if I have a 480w driver with 50% efficiency, I should build a tent with (480*0,5)/30 = 8 sq ft (using leds)
how bad would be 25w/sq ft?
You are delusional.@ GBAUTO is right on the money, 30w/ft. gets it done with good, efficient LED. These days that's about 150-180 lumen per watt. White light is where it's at, COBs, strips and boards. In a year or two it'll be 25w/ft.
Just ran two 324 boards at 320 watts total in a 5 x 2.5 and it outperformed yield wise by a touch over a 600hps in same tent. Was first time using QBs. With that said I'm not tearing down my 1ks for LED anytime soon, I still prefer hps over LED grown bud when it comes down to final product.You are delusional.
According to your "pulled it out of your ass" figures, your 30 watt per square foot light would be 40% more efficient than a MH/HPS fixture.
That doesn't exist on this planet. Not even fucking close. Even the VERY high end COBS are only 15 to 18% more efficient on a good day. Some brag about them being 20% more efficient, but that's about the limit of it.
What's more, according to you, your 30 watts would be producing 5,400 lumens.
Now, one of the better COB lights out there is a Timber Model 4vs. It uses Vero29 Gen 7 COB LED's. 4 of them to be exact. They each produce 12,500 lumens.
So, if you do the math on a 3 x 3 foot grow area, the Timber models stats are:
So please tell us all what magical LED you use that is somehow nearly twice as efficient as one of the best in the world.
- 44.4 watts per square foot
- 5,555 lumens per square foot.
What's more, let's do the math on a comparable MH/HPS lamp which would be a 600 watt fixture in that same area. Then your numbers look like this:
So is there a power savings on the LED in that same area? Absolutely.
- 66.6 watts per square foot
- 6,666 lumens per square foot veg (MH)
- 10,000 lumens per square foot flower (HPS)
Will the LED grow as effectively as the MH/HPS? Sure. Both will do a fine job.
But if you think for one minute 30 watts per square foot is going to come even REMOTELY close to either one of those setups, you are beyond stupid.
Stop making shit up, pulling figures out of your ass, and spreading false information.
Here's your problem: