jjng5
Well-Known Member
@ Dr. Who -- I love your response. That was simply awesome, I'll probably read it a few more times even.
The goal is all about maximum efficiency. I know that some people grow for the largest harvest, biggest monster buds, others for strain variety, whatever... in this case it's all about searching for peak efficiency. With this setup there are two Saturn 6 Titan controllers with PPM meters on the way for setup to precisely regulate the 20 lb CO2 tank per flower tent. There are two flower tents, 1 veg/clone tent, and 1 harvest/dry tent -- all for perpetual harvest setup. No plans to use CO2 for veg, as you indicated earlier it is not efficient. Just so we are on the same page.
I have a couple follow up questions for you:
Thanks again for the help and thoughtful responses! Very educational and helpful.
The goal is all about maximum efficiency. I know that some people grow for the largest harvest, biggest monster buds, others for strain variety, whatever... in this case it's all about searching for peak efficiency. With this setup there are two Saturn 6 Titan controllers with PPM meters on the way for setup to precisely regulate the 20 lb CO2 tank per flower tent. There are two flower tents, 1 veg/clone tent, and 1 harvest/dry tent -- all for perpetual harvest setup. No plans to use CO2 for veg, as you indicated earlier it is not efficient. Just so we are on the same page.
I have a couple follow up questions for you:
- You mentioned needing enough light intensity to maximum CO2. Is there a general rule of thumb that graphs optimum CO2 PPM to watt/sq ft or lumen/sq ft? This would greatly help someone know how to achieve efficiency when setting their CO2 per tent based upon the available light.
In the first flower tent there are (2) 400 watt HPS air-cooled plus (2) HLG QB 324 V2's (~165 watt each x 2) in a 20.5 sq foot space, which is about 55 watts / sq ft with 30% of that being high efficiency QB LED light. In the second flower tent there are (2) 600 watt HPS aircooled plus (2) HLG QB 324 V2's (~165 watt each x 2) in a 25 sq foot space, which comes out to slightly more than 60 watts / sq ft with 20% of that being high efficiency QB LED light.
It would be very helpful to know how to adjust PPM based upon light added. So if one changes the intensity of their light or makes changes to the available lighting (ie: adding/removing), one would know how to consequently change the atmospheric PPM to match light output. (Almost in the same way that you graph the VPD temp. and humidity relationship above)
- Not to be confused with the previous question, what do you feel the peak efficiency light range is for growing with and without CO2? I know that you can continue to throw more and more light at your plants and continue to see larger and larger results, however Maximumyield commercial grow articles indicate that there is a diminishing return beyond a certain watt per sq feet, generally speaking. I was curious what that light saturation point is before the bell curve begins to become less and less efficient with each added watt of light. Some estimates suggest 60 watt per sq foot of HID light or 25-30 watts per sq feet of LED (depending upon chip efficiency). How do you feel about that? Do those numbers seem accurate based upon your experience?
- You seem to also be growing for peak efficiency; the best use of every resource, every dollar, and every amount of time for the maximum return. Most commercial growing articles recommend SOG for peak efficiency. I'm curious how you feel about that and how many plants you grow per sq. feet. I'm also wondering what length of veg time you provide.
- I can see from your post that one needs to follow this VPD chart to maximize their CO2/light efficiency. That makes sense. There's a laser thermometer that can help keep an eye on things in conjunction with the other equipment. That said, with a higher RH %, how best does one prevent mold and bacteria growth during the mid-late stages of flower?
- If I am understanding your post above, one would need to use more nutrients (in other words a higher concentration of ppm or EC) with injected CO2 while following the VPD chart above, not only to adjust for the increased plant growth but also because of the decreased water uptake from the roots. Or do I have part of this backwards? [Scratching my head...]
- Why did you stop using CO2? If not in the 1100 range, why not at even a 600-900 ppm range? Ed Rosenthal put it simply when he said, "If you're not using CO2 then you are wasting your light energy" (not an exact quote). I'm wondering why you stopped using it all together?
Thanks again for the help and thoughtful responses! Very educational and helpful.