all the knowledge you have isnt first hand tho is it, its knowledge you are qouting from some book or article or other.Let's be clear, I don't give a rats ass what you do. My argument is with the guy that wrote this garbage. The typical noob will fall for every gimmick and snake oil that comes along....that's just what they do.
Having said that, if you can poke the author, get him over here. I feel feisty..... feel like it's time to open up a can of whup-ass on that boy. (botanically speaking of course)
UB
And it's wrong, again.i haven cut and pasted shit but fuck it this is for you
Not accurate. A plant is capable of receiving only a certain amount of photos during the day, that is called a light saturation point. Any more photons over that amount is a hindrance and/or detrimental mainly due to a requirement for more C02, but I digress. A master gardener will find the saturation point for his particular crop and tweek all cultural factors to the max.The Theory
The theory behind the 18 hour Day/Night cycle is that during a normal 24 hour light cycle plants will usually achieve high growth rates peaking at 100% capacity during the first 50 - 60% of the day. The growth rates will then diminish rapidly and the last 20 - 30% of the day achieves minimal growth. So by reducing the length of the day we are triggering an increased growth mode where the growth rates are at their peak for the majority of the day. This effectively achieves a very fast growth cycle with full yield potential.
False absolutes here. (Kinda kin to "true lies".) Depends on the other factors.NOTE: .....The recommended lighting is 600W per square meter.
What's the plant's light sat. pt.?The Cycles
Vegetative Cycle - Lights ON 14 hours, Lights OFF 4 hours
Highly limited food production due to limited photosynthesis compounded by excessive respiration rates which deplete carbos manufactured during the day. A double whammy against tissue production and maintenance.....just plain stupid.Flowering Cycle - Lights ON 6 hours, Lights OFF 12 hours
Feels good.The Benefits.....
props on the big words but answer my last postAnd it's wrong, again.
Not accurate. A plant is capable of receiving only a certain amount of photos during the day, that is called a light saturation point. Any more photons over that amount is a hindrance and/or detrimental mainly due to a requirement for more C02, but I digress. A master gardener will find the saturation point for his particular crop and tweek all cultural factors to the max.
Having said that, it's true, a plant's photosynthetic efficiency is best while receiving morning sun, but then again that may be relative to what's received the entire day factoring in heat, etc.
False absolutes here. (Kinda kin to "true lies".) Depends on the other factors.
What's the plant's light sat. pt.?
Highly limited food production due to limited photosynthesis compounded by excessive respiration rates which deplete carbos manufactured during the day. A double whammy against tissue production and maintenance.....just plain stupid.
Feels good.
UB
i built a little relay box with higher contacts .. so my little digital contols it not the lights .. dont have to worry about it flaking out on meyes, i had a segment break on me ond vowed never to cheap out on timers again the one i run now is a contactor and timer running at 26 amps.
is enough to power 6x600's apparently.