InTheValley
Well-Known Member
This is exactly why i dont try to push my PAR above 500, and the benefit of using less nutes to sustain healthier growth overall,
Wat!?Any data to back it up? Someone give me some terp profiles! Lets bring some real science in here!
Speaking on the topic of warm white CCT...Wat!?
Additionally, the initial question posed by the OP is epistemically flawed. I reject the premise that CRI is specifically relevant to either yield or quality. I don’t believe there’s any data to suggest any theory in these regards, nor was any effect postulated beyond the word “better,” which is not specific enough to be meaningful, much less useful.
Cheers, lovers!
Red and blue light still make weight past 500μmol/s, just green makes more weight.. I think past 500μmol/s you'd just want to supp with a heavier green SPD, not nessecarily only green. But you're right the greater the wattage supplied the lower the yield rate, despite the actual total bud weight increasing.This is exactly why i dont try to push my PAR above 500, and the benefit of using less nutes to sustain healthier growth overall,
Solid information, Chief, thank you for your insight.Its not a huge difference in SPD, but it seems that the differences do exist and that imo seem to be pointing towards a beneficial effect over a detrimental. But yes, I took the question as an opportunity to talk about green, what @Rocket Soul said about red shifting further is probably a big part of the differences too I'd imagine, it seems high CRI shifts/widens the red out a bit and increases green intensity.
View attachment 4378626
EDIT:
Looking at the SPDs, it almost looks like the 757 V3's and probably all 3500k have quite a bit of green, maybe 40%+? I guess I could digitize and find out. I'm tired I'll get back tmrw.
Until it isn’t.Its all a big fucking guess.
Unless it isn’t.Its all a big fucking guess.
By the time it isn't, we'll all be growing under the sun without worry.Until it isn’t.
Unless it isn’t.
Not quite true. For white phosphor led, yes, higher cri higher red. But some of the most extreme low ccts (nichia 2000k, blux 1750k) is actually only 80 cri cause they dont show as white, shows like orange.That shift to deeper reds is significant for flowering. CRI is not magic, just check CRI between comparable HPS and MH. It’s the increases in reds.
You probably have found it by now, but I will put it here for those who are wondering: The PPFDs were not the same, the plants receiving subcanopy lighting in this experiment received ~95µmol/s more than the control group (~500 µmol from the top). It is postulated by the authors that this increase in light is the reason for the increase in yield.this is sub canopy along with above canopy..and the same total wattages?
it is pretty dense info..it is taking me a bit to digest
thanks this is esrth shaking
I am also a fan of green light, apart from the bits you were talking about, it also helps plants with shade avoidance. It is also used to reduce transpiration due to shading by other leaves.Speaking on the topic of warm white CCT...
Its not a huge difference in SPD, but it seems that the differences do exist and that imo seem to be pointing towards a beneficial effect over a detrimental. But yes, I took the question as an opportunity to talk about green, what @Rocket Soul said about red shifting further is probably a big part of the differences too I'd imagine, it seems high CRI shifts/widens the red out a bit and increases green intensity.
View attachment 4378626
EDIT:
Looking at the SPDs, it almost looks like the 757 V3's and probably all 3500k (or 3000k, I think this is a 3000k example SPD) have quite a bit of green, maybe 40%+? I guess I could digitize and find out. I'm tired I'll get back tmrw.
OK, so I don't have the exact answer you require, but I've got a fairly close one. Those SPDs you posted are Nichias, which is what we're using for our High Light boards. The SPD below is a mix of CRI90 2700K V3-F1 (70% weighting) and Optisolis 2700K CRI97-98 (30% weighting). The RGB ratios are 11%, 37%, 47% with 5% FR.Speaking on the topic of warm white CCT...
Its not a huge difference in SPD, but it seems that the differences do exist and that imo seem to be pointing towards a beneficial effect over a detrimental. But yes, I took the question as an opportunity to talk about green, what @Rocket Soul said about red shifting further is probably a big part of the differences too I'd imagine, it seems high CRI shifts/widens the red out a bit and increases green intensity.
View attachment 4378626
EDIT:
Looking at the SPDs, it almost looks like the 757 V3's and probably all 3500k (or 3000k, I think this is a 3000k example SPD) have quite a bit of green, maybe 40%+? I guess I could digitize and find out. I'm tired I'll get back tmrw.
I think the OP's premise is that within any particular LED family, higher CRI generally equates to a red shift towards lower wavelengths (better efficiency of photosynthesis), as well as increased cyan, more far red and a more even distribution of spectra across the range.Wat!?
Additionally, the initial question posed by the OP is epistemically flawed. I reject the premise that CRI is specifically relevant to either yield or quality. I don’t believe there’s any data to suggest any theory in these regards, nor was any effect postulated beyond the word “better,” which is not specific enough to be meaningful, much less useful.
Cheers, lovers!
Thank you for taking the time to make at an attempt at rigor, too few of us do, myself included. I am always interested in learning about light quality but it is not my primary interest. I really appreciate being able to learn more from threads like this, so thank you to everyone contributing here.View attachment 4379111
So guys.. A bit of a concession here.. After running the majority numbers this is what I'm getting...
It looks like actually (at least with Nichia 757V3 3k) the CRI80 has more overall green than the CRI90. It does seem that the CRI90 has a higher localized portion of the green, but on a whole, if my digitizing is accurate, the CRI80 has more green...
Boy do I feel stupid haha... Apologies
Attached are the .pdf's that show the calculations and graphs..
If you want a graph digitized for effeciency or weighted to the action SPD, lmk.. I can't post xcl files here or I'd just post the automated spreadsheet..
Still advocate for green, and high CRI, but at least in this instance (and probably every instance) they aren't 1 in the same...