Stoner Smurf
Active Member
So I have a little theory, not exactly sure if it will work so hopefully someone with more expertise on the area can confirm if the theory is sound. +Rep for any insightful conversation for sure. For those of you whom this is not your area of expertise, you are probably going to want to know what the hormone Phytochrome is. Photochrome is responsible for the flowering of marijuana plants.
So my theory is infrared light can be used instead of dark periods during flower. My logic is as follows:
The following statements are true:
-Flowering of a plant is controlled by the ratio of the two isoforms of Photochrome.
-Pr converts to Pfr in the presence of red light, and Pfr converts to Pr in the absence of red light.
-A high level of Pr causes plants to flower.
-Pfr also converts to Pr in the presence of far-red light or infrared light.
-The process of Pfr converting to Pr in the dark is slow.
Using flimsy deductive logic I come to the following conclusion:
-The presence of light causes the hormone photochrome to change between it's two isoforms much more rapidly than the total absence of light.
-Infrared light can be used in conjunction with the absence of visual light to greatly reduce the necessary dark time for the plant.
Here is why this is intriguing. If you could flower non-auto-flower plants under 18(HPS)/6(Infrared) you would be giving your plants 50% more light. More light equals more yield. Getting more yield per plant is very very important to a lot of us legal growers who grow under silly plant restrictions. Since you are quickly raising the Pr to the 'critical point' each night and letting it sit there for 6 hours, the plant is spending just as much time with the Pr beyond the 'critical point' as a plant in nature, maybe even longer. In natural total dark settings it takes the plant 10-12 hours to reach that critical point. It varies strain to strain, but every strain needs at least 10-12 hours of darkness to flower.
One problem is I don't know much about infrared. I know it has uses in photography, and there are such things as infrared LEDs. Infrared LEDs appear to give off a lot of visible light, and I thought infrared was invisible to the naked eye. In order for this to have any hope of working I'd imagine the light would have to be only far-red light and absolutely no red light.
So anybody with a good understanding of plant biology out there. Is this theory sound? It looks good to me! But I by no means have a degree in horticulture or biology. Anybody know where I can get some good infrared lights to give this a shot? Unless someone much smarter than I comes along and pisses in my corn flakes, I don't see why I shouldn't give this a shot, small scale. Kinda broke right now, but hopefully one day in the near future I can afford to set up 2 small side by side grow cabs. One cab, one plant. 150 watt HPS each, one plant gets the traditional 12/12, the other 18/6 with infrared. Should be a pretty straight-forward experiment.
So what's everyone think? +Rep for anyone who brings anything interesting to the table.
So my theory is infrared light can be used instead of dark periods during flower. My logic is as follows:
The following statements are true:
-Flowering of a plant is controlled by the ratio of the two isoforms of Photochrome.
-Pr converts to Pfr in the presence of red light, and Pfr converts to Pr in the absence of red light.
-A high level of Pr causes plants to flower.
-Pfr also converts to Pr in the presence of far-red light or infrared light.
-The process of Pfr converting to Pr in the dark is slow.
Using flimsy deductive logic I come to the following conclusion:
-The presence of light causes the hormone photochrome to change between it's two isoforms much more rapidly than the total absence of light.
-Infrared light can be used in conjunction with the absence of visual light to greatly reduce the necessary dark time for the plant.
Here is why this is intriguing. If you could flower non-auto-flower plants under 18(HPS)/6(Infrared) you would be giving your plants 50% more light. More light equals more yield. Getting more yield per plant is very very important to a lot of us legal growers who grow under silly plant restrictions. Since you are quickly raising the Pr to the 'critical point' each night and letting it sit there for 6 hours, the plant is spending just as much time with the Pr beyond the 'critical point' as a plant in nature, maybe even longer. In natural total dark settings it takes the plant 10-12 hours to reach that critical point. It varies strain to strain, but every strain needs at least 10-12 hours of darkness to flower.
One problem is I don't know much about infrared. I know it has uses in photography, and there are such things as infrared LEDs. Infrared LEDs appear to give off a lot of visible light, and I thought infrared was invisible to the naked eye. In order for this to have any hope of working I'd imagine the light would have to be only far-red light and absolutely no red light.
So anybody with a good understanding of plant biology out there. Is this theory sound? It looks good to me! But I by no means have a degree in horticulture or biology. Anybody know where I can get some good infrared lights to give this a shot? Unless someone much smarter than I comes along and pisses in my corn flakes, I don't see why I shouldn't give this a shot, small scale. Kinda broke right now, but hopefully one day in the near future I can afford to set up 2 small side by side grow cabs. One cab, one plant. 150 watt HPS each, one plant gets the traditional 12/12, the other 18/6 with infrared. Should be a pretty straight-forward experiment.
So what's everyone think? +Rep for anyone who brings anything interesting to the table.