BobCajun
Well-Known Member
Well, this article seems to indicate roughly equal efficacies in PPFD output per watt input. Most of the LED lamps were considerably less efficient than HPS, others were closer. How that translates into actual plant growth and dry weight were not included. It may well be that LED produces more actual weight per watt, since it has a wider spectrum and more far red and blue in its spectrum. Far red is known to increase photosynthesis significantly in some plants and I think Cannabis is one of them. Lights can have equal PPFD levels but considerably different actual spectrums. HPS has a bunch of PPFD in one tight red range.Nah on the wattage claim. Top quality led IS FAR MORE EFFICIENT THAN HID WATT FOR WATT.
Also not overly expensive if you build your own. RIU led diy is the leader in the cannabis world for latest LED tech and know how.
I've read that LED does expend 70-80% of its power input on heat production, close to that of most other lights including incandescents and HID, just that it comes from the back of the lights rather than from infrared light being shone into the growing chamber as in the case of HPS. You just need to cool the heatsink on top of the LED fixture rather than the chamber itself. Preferably, you would have the top of the lamps outside the top of the growing chamber. I haven't seen anyone actually doing that but that would be my suggestion. Growing chamber temps could thereby be kept quite low.
I actually just ordered a Spectrum King LED light so I'll report back in a few months on the results. They're actually just generic high bay LED lamps but apparently do work for plant growth. This article discusses white LEDs for plant growth. The high bays Spectrum King sells are neutral whites, 4000k. I know because in one video they held a light meter under them and it showed 4000k and the spectrum graph exactly matched the one from Cree LED company's graph for 2600-3700k LEDs. Apparently the 4000k ones are close enough to 3700k that you can't notice a significant difference. This image shows the graph. The red line is the one that the meter showed under the 90 degree Spectrum King fixture. Here's the video with the meter.
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