gotcottonmouth
Member
Ive been wondering some stuff and they're all kind of "out there" so just bare with me.
1.
If we control the light schedule, why are we sticking to a 24 hr clock? I was thinking this might be particularly useful for AF strains because they are less dependent on light schedule by their nature. What might happen if you use 20-2 light schedule? Doesn't seem like a big difference but that's 2 hours sooner that they will get light every day, 14 hours light a week extra... almost a whole "day"
2.
If AF strains finish in about 8-10 weeks usually and CO2 can increase plant production up to 250% (mathematically speaking but not very realistic), how fast do you think you can go from seed to chop in optimal environment with AF strains?
3.
Is dry ice a viable source of CO2 or is it too expensive.
4.
Say, hypothetically, you have a CFL HPS and MH light setup. All of which have 30,000 lumens output and are the same Kelvin rating.
Heat and energy efficiency aside, would they all benefit the plant equally? Or are there other features that distinguish lights from eachother.
I understand HPS and MH don't come in equal K but hypothetically....
5.
Wouldn't it be better to put the lights below the plant so less energy would be spent in transferring nutes against gravity... impractical but if someone could build it then hooraa!
just food for thought
1.
If we control the light schedule, why are we sticking to a 24 hr clock? I was thinking this might be particularly useful for AF strains because they are less dependent on light schedule by their nature. What might happen if you use 20-2 light schedule? Doesn't seem like a big difference but that's 2 hours sooner that they will get light every day, 14 hours light a week extra... almost a whole "day"
2.
If AF strains finish in about 8-10 weeks usually and CO2 can increase plant production up to 250% (mathematically speaking but not very realistic), how fast do you think you can go from seed to chop in optimal environment with AF strains?
3.
Is dry ice a viable source of CO2 or is it too expensive.
4.
Say, hypothetically, you have a CFL HPS and MH light setup. All of which have 30,000 lumens output and are the same Kelvin rating.
Heat and energy efficiency aside, would they all benefit the plant equally? Or are there other features that distinguish lights from eachother.
I understand HPS and MH don't come in equal K but hypothetically....
5.
Wouldn't it be better to put the lights below the plant so less energy would be spent in transferring nutes against gravity... impractical but if someone could build it then hooraa!
just food for thought