Intensity does increase. Remember the sprinkler analogy? Number of photons at a given energy (wavelength) from a bulb = droplets of water from a sprinkler head. Add another sprinkler, get more water.*only* playing devil's advocate.
But since the 'lux meter' (aka: light meter) was designed for photography (human eye perception. I've herd SO many debates about that a 'plant' 'sees' different light then a human) and relabeled for the horiticultrue group... (it is NOT and will never convince of the different that iits not a relabeled item with a different scale.) Doesn't that open up the results a bit? (did a plant confirm the results? Got a source?)
I *do* agree that intensity doesn't increase. with # of bulbs (aka, from the electronic POV, its in parallel, and not series : or volume vs force)
Sorry man. 1/2 rant. 1/2 Q, and half other ( )
Just switched from 460w CFLs (2 105s and 2 125s) to a 400w HPS with a batwing reflector. Audrey is getting MUCH more light, and there is no appreciable difference in the temperature. (Yes, the HPS bulb is considerably hotter than a CFL ... but you're dealing with one bulb instead of four, so it evens out).Thus endeth the lesson. Amen.
A 400HPS will keep any stoner (and a couple of mates) in smoke for a good long time- and the quality will be vastly better, with much improved density and weight yield than those raised under fluoros.
Sorry, no, it doesn't. What's adding the push to your photons by putting the lamps next to one another? It sure isn't photons bouncing off one another.Intensity does increase.
I use HID, and advocate it. What I'm saying is that your 'science' simply isn't so.Sorry, no, it doesn't. What's adding the push to your photons by putting the lamps next to one another? It sure isn't photons bouncing off one another.
Remain willfully confused if you like. Everyone else is growing dope with proper high intensity lighting.
Well, you could look at the explanations and analogies I've given already, in terms of the science, but you apparently refuse to do so.When you explain how a dim lamp next to a dim lamp makes brighter light, someone will believe you- and not before.
But the fact remains that only one ball can go through the hoop at a time.Think about it like this: If you and I are standing on the freethrow line throwing up one shot every five seconds and making every one, there are 24 balls per minute going through the hoop, whereas with just one of us, it will be 12 balls per minute. If we're talking about monochromatic light (one wavelength), this is a direct analogy with using two lights versus one, replacing basketballs with photons.
Photons do not interfere with each other in this case. Change the hoop to a wall. In addition, the whole point is that the photons coming from an HID are THE SAME as the photons coming from a CFL. The only distinguishing feature that photons have is their energy - which we can distinguish by color/wavelength. Other than that, they are identical, traveling at - you guessed it - the speed of light.But the fact remains that only one ball can go through the hoop at a time.
I'm sorry, that is not true, except for maybe if the bulbs blocked light. If you could get them all into an area as small as an HID, if would be as bright. Seriously. One problem that's common with CFLs is that because they are relatively low power density, it's hard to get as many as you'd like close enough to your plants. This is simply a practical limitation, not one imposed by the 'dimness' of CFLs.AL B is right in saying that even if you put 1000 of the brightest cfl's in to one big reflector your not gonna get the intensity of a 1000 watt light.
Yes it would. Lux = lumens / area. More bulbs = more lumens = more lux.Regardless of the size of your CFL's..
In fact the LUX reading of such a fixture would not be substantially higher than the lux reading of 1 of the CFLS in the fixture...
I am ready and willing to eat my words, if any body on this site can convince me otherwise it is you ceestlye.Clearly a scientific explanation is insufficient.
Well, that's nice and all, but I do have a shit-ton of evidence, as I pointed out in an earlier post.There are two sides of a debate here, one side has evidence and the other has opinion. The one which has evidence wins until the other side can produce anything supporting their argument beyond opinion.
Lux = lumens / area , weighted by wavelength.More light would equal more lux, not lummens wouldn't it?...you cannot add lummens together...I think is the whole point here. In order to achieve a higher output you would need to get a bulb that puts out more.
Because if they sell you a 4 tube fixture they have a better profit margin then if they sell you a single tube one. So to answer that question they do it to make money. Weather or not they offer you a 40 bulb fixture and claim it's a zillion lumen doesn't make anything true or not about the nature of light.Well, that's nice and all, but I do have a shit-ton of evidence, as I pointed out in an earlier post.
Let's start with a simple question I posed earlier: why do tube fluorescent fixtures have more than one bulb, if lumens are not additive?
That doesn't make any sense, and you know it. If you could use one bulb instead of four, you would use one.Because if they sell you a 4 tube fixture they have a better profit margin then if they sell you a single tube one. So to answer that question they do it to make money. Weather or not they offer you a 40 bulb fixture and claim it's a zillion lumen doesn't make anything true or not about the nature of light.
The reason your bathroom has so many bulbs is to create light that illuminates from every angle, and also to avoid burning your eyes.In my bathroom there are 16 vanity bulbs, something like 800 lumen each. Now if I look up at them i'm fine, they don't really hurt my eyes because they aren't really that bright. But if I go look at a 5000 lumen light it does hurt my eyes, it's too bright... But that doesn't make sense in your world where lumen combine, because in my bathrrom I am pushing like 13k lumen, there is no way that shouldn't hurt my eyes if the 5k lumen light does.
Observation is the method of obtaining scientific evidence. It's part of the scientific method. How did we deduce things like the earth being round? Observation of the world around us.But that's not evidence, that's just observation and all. If I put up a lumen meter and couldn't get more then 800 lumen then that would be evidence.