Randomblame
Well-Known Member
Yeah, you can use far-red also in veg and because of the lower intensity you would see the improvements pretty fast cuz the emerson effect is stronger with low light conditions. I also use far-red from the 2nd half of the flowering stage for the 2nd half of the day. Far-red has a few more useful effects and each grower should have some far-red on a separated circuit.
I know the heat wave bulbs but have not used them. Their heat waves are above 1000nm, probably 1000-3000nm or so. They would help to heat up the leaves which means you could work with lower ambient temps. Lower ambient temps means you need less humidity so it would help indeed to maintain a good VPD but you need to test it and measure the actual leaf temps with and without these bulbs. There are a few questions you would need to figure out. For instance...
How much watts are needed to increase the leaf temps by 1, 2 lr 3°?
How much space can be heated up properly with one bulb?
Can you avoid using a humidifier?
Power costs per day?
An finally can you improve your yields?
Its probably cheaper to use a humidifier running a few times the day as to use a few of such heat radiators all day long.
Heat waves also increase stem elongation like far-red. For this reason I don't use far-red in the first half of the flowering cycle unless its a low stretching indika and I want to see more stretch.
Currently I'm using 325w white LED, a mix of ⅔ 3k/CRI80 strips and ⅓ 3k/CRI93 COB's and have only additional 10w of far-red. My area is 10sft and I have around 20μMol/s/m² far-red from the CRI80 and 90 mix and another 20 out of the extra far-red diodes, maybe a little more. So 40, maybe 45μMol/s/m² total. That's around 5% of the total intensity and already enoung. Probably comparable to a CRI90 only spectrum and I simply don't need more cuz I can regularily shorten the flowering cycles by at least a week without loss in yield.
I know the heat wave bulbs but have not used them. Their heat waves are above 1000nm, probably 1000-3000nm or so. They would help to heat up the leaves which means you could work with lower ambient temps. Lower ambient temps means you need less humidity so it would help indeed to maintain a good VPD but you need to test it and measure the actual leaf temps with and without these bulbs. There are a few questions you would need to figure out. For instance...
How much watts are needed to increase the leaf temps by 1, 2 lr 3°?
How much space can be heated up properly with one bulb?
Can you avoid using a humidifier?
Power costs per day?
An finally can you improve your yields?
Its probably cheaper to use a humidifier running a few times the day as to use a few of such heat radiators all day long.
Heat waves also increase stem elongation like far-red. For this reason I don't use far-red in the first half of the flowering cycle unless its a low stretching indika and I want to see more stretch.
Currently I'm using 325w white LED, a mix of ⅔ 3k/CRI80 strips and ⅓ 3k/CRI93 COB's and have only additional 10w of far-red. My area is 10sft and I have around 20μMol/s/m² far-red from the CRI80 and 90 mix and another 20 out of the extra far-red diodes, maybe a little more. So 40, maybe 45μMol/s/m² total. That's around 5% of the total intensity and already enoung. Probably comparable to a CRI90 only spectrum and I simply don't need more cuz I can regularily shorten the flowering cycles by at least a week without loss in yield.