polyarcturus
Well-Known Member
so wrong since kelvin is derived from the mixture of light and its resultant color. this being said the bulb may be 10,000K for example, but does this mean it does not have any red, or even any red at in the same proportions as a higher kelvin? no. all it means is that the dominant spectrum is blue ther could be green and yellow or none of those and red for all we know. but the overall color is 10,000k.2700K is 2700K.............no matter what the source is.
a lot of T5 manufacturers have stopped using "kelvin" as the standard and use graphs and NM to get the job done of explaining the quality of thier light properly.
im just saying ive grown seedling under 5000k for the longest, since i started growing i immediately noticed seedling grew faster under the redder light than 6500k and faster than 2700k.
after learning a ton about PAR i would love to see a flowering grow under 5000k lights only i have yet to see it done but i have seen what the Florasuns(5000k T5) do in veg but not in flower.
i got about a dozen different T12 tubes in the basement that says ive done my research. i used a mix of 6500k 5000k and 3000k when i flowered under them that was a long time ago and some pretty fat buds for coming off T12 more than people told me it would be.
another really good point is this 2700k hPS bulbs graph vs 2700k CFL bulb graph. similar spectrum but not the same yet both are 2700k.