Proof of what? I sense a story here and enquiring minds wanna know!Here's a good representation... I've been saying this time and time again... I was even ridiculed for it, heres the proof...
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I bet it's done now! How did it finish?No, this is my current run with about two weeks left. Trop cherry and mac1View attachment 5452625View attachment 5452624
I’ve waited 3 1/2 weeks to say’s this… he thinks the study he posted proves that “blurple” spectrums provide the best yield and quality…. But it doesn’t… nor can those conclusions be drawn from a single study, let alone from the one previously posted. Delusions of grandeurProof of what? I sense a story here and enquiring minds wanna know!
The numbers provided can be taken as an exploratory study. If you want to show proof there are a few statistical test that can be run byt you need much more numbers to actually have a shot at getting to statistical significance. The golden standard: T-test with p:0.05. this would mean that differences in mean values and variance has only 5% chance of looking different due to noise rather than signal. These test extremely dependant on variance, standard deviation and n: the amount of measurements or in this case yield per plant. Here n is 2 (in one case 1!), which would mean no firm conclusions can be drawn.I’ve waited 3 1/2 weeks to say’s this… he thinks the study he posted proves that “blurple” spectrums provide the best yield and quality…. But it doesn’t… nor can those conclusions be drawn from a single study, let alone from the one previously posted. Delusions of grandeur
This is my thinking aswell. Nowadays theres +3.5 ppf/w 640s so theres options to use colder 80cri whites/evos in order to not suffer any efficiency loss for 90 cri but youd have to add a massive amount of redsup to compensate. This is the study i was refering to above, very interesting numbers though expanded blues/violets wasn't the purpose here, but it shows quite clearly that the "all reds are the same" doesnt hold true (so why not same on the blue side? ) and that wider spectrum has a benefit (wide red sup and widest white base were the winners all the way thru while 660 red sup only looks lacklustre, especially when looking at terps)@Rocket Soul
I’m not saying the numbers are useless, but like you said, the data set is way too small with too much variance to draw any type of real conclusion. Exploratory is being generous if we’re out here trying to prove things definitively.
Not only that, but the plants in the study were obviously a hemp type variety based on the cannabinoid numbers. I would want to see the same study done on drug type with a larger data set, way more plants, and replicated as well tested over and over at different light intensities. I don’t believe spectrum manipulation effects THC & CBD synthesis the same.
Also, LED 4 from the study KitnerPush posted is indeed a blurple spectrum, with 0.26% amount of green wavelengths. It’s just 660nm and 450nm wavelengths. What we don’t know was ppfd the plants were grown at. From previous studies I’ve seen comparing spectrum vs yield, the blurple spectrums never match full spectrum at higher ppfd ranges in yield, cannabinoid or terpene production.
Most warm white LED’s have a pretty significant amount of 640nm already, especially higher CRI chips. I’m more interested in supplementing from 670-750 & 365nm-450nm to try to hit the full breadth of Chlorophylls, phytochromes and cryptochromes, as those are the wavelengths lacking from traditional white spectrums.
I haven’t seen this study yet, I’ll have to check it out. Thanks for the link!This is my thinking aswell. Nowadays theres +3.5 ppf/w 640s so theres options to use colder 80cri whites/evos in order to not suffer any efficiency loss for 90 cri but youd have to add a massive amount of redsup to compensate. This is the study i was refering to above, very interesting numbers though expanded blues/violets wasn't the purpose here, but it shows quite clearly that the "all reds are the same" doesnt hold true (so why not same on the blue side? ) and that wider spectrum has a benefit (wide red sup and widest white base were the winners all the way thru while 660 red sup only looks lacklustre, especially when looking at terps)
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Frontiers | The role of red and white light in optimizing growth and accumulation of plant specialized metabolites at two light intensities in medical cannabis (Cannabis sativa L.)
The cultivation of medical cannabis (Cannabis sativa L.) is expanding in controlled environments, driven by evolving governmental regulations for healthcare ...www.frontiersin.org
It has full statiscal analysis showing when were getting signal and when were getting noise. Yes, a whole lot of noise but you can still see very clear trends