No, because that's not how my billing works.Anyone ever experimented with his?
I don't care how your billing works.No, because that's not how my billing works.
Jerking your lights off all day long won't save you a dime, sir.
Want to save money?
Upgrade your lights.
Are you trying to not arouse suspicion from your "roommate" by jacking the bill up?
Maybe those were details that shouldn't have been left out of the original post.I don't care how your billing works.
I've got quantum boards, what do you suggest can save money over that?
No, I live in a country where electricity is expensive.
Do you have experience with modified light cycles?Maybe those were details that shouldn't have been left out of the original post.
Maybe before you waste people's time and energy you give people the details they need in order to answer your question in the first place.
Playing fifty questions with you people is exausting.
It would seem to me to be pretty hard on the equipment to cycle that many times a day. Might chew into the operating life. Can't imagine it's any easier on the plants.
Why would that cause herming during veg?That sounds like extreme hermy risk to me - I'd just dim to half the wattage if I wanted to half my bill
Doing that will not only bugger your lights faster thanks to the constant surges as they go on every hour, it will also cost you more thanks the the repeated surges in power use every hour.Hey folks
I'm looking at saving on my electricity bill, I was wondering if there would be any benefit to running a completely different light cycle. 1h on, 1h off for the whole day.
Anyone ever experimented with his?
No "might" about it, it will. Drastically.Maybe those were details that shouldn't have been left out of the original post.
Maybe before you waste people's time and energy you give people the details they need in order to answer your question in the first place.
Playing fifty questions with you people is exausting.
It would seem to me to be pretty hard on the equipment to cycle that many times a day. Might chew into the operating life. Can't imagine it's any easier on the plants.
If you run 24/0, cut that down to 18/6, the only way you'll cut the bill is to use less and constant switching on and off will not achieve that.I don't care how your billing works.
I've got quantum boards, what do you suggest can save money over that?
No, I live in a country where electricity is expensive.
Would there be enough time for any plant to start some meaningful photosynthesis in an hour?1 on, 1 off sounds a bit daft; the plants need time to shift between day and night.
You've been given various reasons for why this is a REALLY bad idea, but it's your plants you'll have wasted and it's your lights that you'll kill off prematurely.I'll report back any changes from running 1:1 - seems no one has attempted this. If 24:0 can work although not efficiently, I don't see why 1:1 won't work. There won't be enough time for the plants to shift into their sleeping cycle and produce ethylene, so I don't see gender expression being an issue until I actually flower the plants.
The "burst", or surge, is not only related to the driver, every single led will take a surge too. Every surge takes some life out of every component, and claimed lifetimes only refer to when something is left on 24/7 in optimal temperatures, humidity, etc. Every time you switch a light on and off, no matter what kind they are, you knock some of that lifetime away.Cannabis plants take about two hours to "go to sleep." One hour on and off will not give them enough time to spend any energy in either state. I would recommend not doing less than 12/12. Depending on your country, electricity is usually more expensive during the day when the demand is higher. I would run mine at night. Stressing your plants by never giving them enough time active or "sleeping" will make them go hermaphroditic on you. If you want to get more out of your cycles and you are going to run during the day, try to use as much sunlight as possible. Also, there is a burst required to start lights when you turn them on, so constantly turning them on and off, will actually user more power than just turning them on for 12 hours and turning them off for 12 hours.
Just to clarify before someone says it... the burst I was referring to, is mostly from the driver, not the actual lights.