Personal grow knowledge (30 years) as it works. I struggled with much more blue and short stumpy plants. One day later dialing it down to 15% and it works.
Rosenthal didn't have what we know know.
800-1000 PPFD can be too much during flowering it depends on which light cycle you are using...Which one are you using? How far are your lights from the canopy top and bottom?
Also what is your light intensity reading?
Much more than PPFD...
Welcome! My name is Dan, and I’m excited you’re here. I study the science of photobiology and let me tell you, not many grow lights out there are giving your ...
thegreensunshineco.com
Hi, 800-1000 PPFD at 12/12 is typically what a lot of growers here are using, although it should be noted that spot readings of around 1000 PPFD often translate to an average 800 (more or less) PPFD across the entire canopy depending on light spread and uniformity.
Now are you referring to DLI (typically around 40+ for cannabis) and if so what light cycle do you use? Some of our customers do use 11/13 for sativas and may adjust their lights accordingly up to 1100-1200 PPFD. We also understand that sativas can handle more light than indicas but many things are strain dependent and supplementary CO2 can also facilitate a significant increase in PAR up to 1400-1500 PPFD.
What instruments do you use to measure your spectrum? I'm assuming you haven't been growing with LED for 30 years, so how do you "dial down" blue? You must be measuring it somehow.
twistedwords said:
One day later dialing it down to 15% and it works.
When you say "it works" do you mean it increases cannabinoid content as we have shown earlier in this thread? Did you measure it before and after with a baseline measurement similar to what we have been doing?
PPFD is measured at the canopy and is a function of light output, distance and reflection etc so I'm also trying to understand what you mean by the following.
twistedwords said:
How far are your lights from the canopy top and bottom?
Also what is your light intensity reading?
Much more than PPFD...
How do you measure your light if not in PPFD? What metric do you use? Whatever distance your lights, PPFD is still PPFD.
If you are referring to Biological Photon Flux then perhaps it's just a matter of semantics. We understand that plants use light outside the normal 400-700nm range and some PAR meters also read YPFD (Yield Photon Flux Density) with typical ranges from 380-780nm. We do measure this and point out that our lights actually have a higher YPFD than other white-phosphor LEDs, as our High Light UV spectrum has about 5% far red as well as a small amount of 400-430nm not typically found in white phosphors. (Far red is generally defined as 700-800nm, which you have referred to as infrared)
On that note, the link you provided is interesting:
Welcome! My name is Dan, and I’m excited you’re here. I study the science of photobiology and let me tell you, not many grow lights out there are giving your ...
thegreensunshineco.com
It is for a company that produces LED lights. I have copied the spectrum on their website and noticed that the light spectrum (nm) scale may have been modified slightly. I've drawn a line through 450nm, which is where most blue pumps peak (445-455nm). It may just be an error. Otherwise it is a nice looking spectrum and appears to have an interesting mix of phosphor coated red (PC Red) LEDs with possibly 2700K CRI90 and 3000K CRI80 white. I am just guessing.
It is not
that different to our own spectrum – the main difference being their lack of near-UV but addition of more red and slightly more far red. But otherwise we appear to be going down similar paths.