I have done some research on colloidal silver feminization and am torn between that or harvesting most of the fem sweet caramel I have going right now, leaving a couple buds on there to go past prime with the hope they pop wood, then using the pollen from those banannas to pollenate one of the fem seedlings I have going right now. Since I had those males earlier 3 plants are now behind in the schedule and this would be a rather easy experiment as opposed to losing a whole female plant to the silver in hopes of producing fem seeds.
Just didn't want to throw over an oz against the wall if I can avoid it. I read the buds are pretty much useless, and or harmful to smoke if you're spraying the plant down with colloidal.
I started out growing with just cfl, its a process man. I'd say get a couple harvests under your belt, the money you save not buying buds should allow you to upgrade to HID, LED, or whatever you see fit for your needs. Fox Farms Ocean Forest Soil is really good and not that expensive if you want to stop using rabbit poop. That just sounds nasty.
As you've followed this thread you know my opinion on the best lighting for small indoor gardens, but it's a hard pill to swallow dropping $1,000 on leds. The good news is they pay for themselves and then some in the long haul. In terms of a more affordable upgrade to your current set here are some really good cfls (can rec from first hand experience) these are beastly and solid for the price.
http://www.1000bulbs.com/product/8255/FC105-S27OD.html
They come them in a 5000k veg spectrum too. I was able to pull some pretty good harvests using just these cfls.
Concerning the specific nm wavelengths - you're right I'd love to know as well, especially with the newer 14 spec units. Prior to ordering my most recent purchase I called and asked. I was right in my earlier post - I was told by HH they consider their spectrum mix proprietary and given the money invested in finding what works well don't want J. Q. Wild Orchid getting the specs and building essentially a carbon copy of their unit. Being the curious person I am I also sent an email to GLH they were also unwilling to provide the 12 different nm used in my 2011 UFO. Given it is their bread and butter I can't say I blame them.
If you really wanted to get ambitious about it the HH are all CREE diodes, you could buy one dissect it and figure out exactly what's up with the different nm. I'm not sure but you could probably deduce what spectrum are employed by looking at the CREE chips and cross checking the ones found inside the light with the ones available in CREE's line up. I'm not willing to void the warranty on mine but have considered taking one of mine apart three years from now just to see what's going on inside the unit.