Yes and no. They don't actually run any cooler, they actually produce about the same amount of heat when compared watt-to-watt. The advantage is that most of the heat is directed upwards into the heatsink and dispersed instead of being cast in all directions including towards the canopy. They reduce canopy temps rather than ambient temps in my experience.And they run cooler to produce the same light. That's a biggie.
I built a 300W panel for a friend because of the closet environment. Runs cool compared to my old 600W HPS with digital ballast
It depends on the drivers and leds and fans and heat sink. 2 different panels of same wattage can put out a different amount of heat. 3 460 watt inda gro's puts out less heat than 2 432 watt 8 bulb T5's. 330 watt cmh puts out the same heat as a 250 watt hps. 860 watt cmh puts out the same heat as a 600 watt hps. It all depends on the materials the light is made from, not necessarily the watts. This subject has been done to death like defoliation has.Yes and no. They don't actually run any cooler, they actually produce about the same amount of heat when compared watt-to-watt. The advantage is that most of the heat is directed upwards into the heatsink and dispersed instead of being cast in all directions including towards the canopy. They reduce canopy temps rather than ambient temps in my experience.
No IR = much less radiant heat. The incredible IR 750+nm from a HID makes them great heaters.
...because they grow in hotter conditions??
... I'd have to see a reference, man. No offense intended brother. IF 10 degrees of IR = 10 degrees of heat, F or C, it's heat. So adding even 10F from 70 to 80F would double the plant metabolism? 80 to 90F?For every 10 degrees of IR that is increased at leaf surface, it doubles the metabolism rate
I was speaking more in general than specific examples, I guess I was a little overly vague. I'm thinking more from a conservation of energy perspective. When comparing two sources of light of equal efficiencies they're going to produce about the same amount of heat energy and raise the ambient temperatures of the room about the same amount assuming there is no mechanical means of removal(ventilation, ect) and the drivers/ballast is located externally.It depends on the drivers and leds and fans and heat sink. 2 different panels of same wattage can put out a different amount of heat. 3 460 watt inda gro's puts out less heat than 2 432 watt 8 bulb T5's. 330 watt cmh puts out the same heat as a 250 watt hps. 860 watt cmh puts out the same heat as a 600 watt hps. It all depends on the materials the light is made from, not necessarily the watts. This subject has been done to death like defoliation has.
Could you expand on this a bit? I don't understand what you mean by '10 degrees of IR'.... It sounds interesting though.For every 10 degrees of IR that is increased at leaf surface, it doubles the metabolism rate
... I'd have to see a reference, man. No offense intended brother. IF 10 degrees of IR = 10 degrees of heat, F or C, it's heat. So adding even 10F from 70 to 80F would double the plant metabolism? 80 to 90F?
Am I mis-understanding?
Could you expand on this a bit? I don't understand what you mean by '10 degrees of IR'.... It sounds interesting though.
You don't wanna start this WATT debate again especially with hyroot involved ........you are absolutely correct though.I was speaking more in general than specific examples, I guess I was a little overly vague. I'm thinking more from a conservation of energy perspective. When comparing two sources of light of equal efficiencies they're going to produce about the same amount of heat energy and raise the ambient temperatures of the room about the same amount assuming there is no mechanical means of removal(ventilation, ect) and the drivers/ballast is located externally.
From my experiments high end COBS(cree/bridgelux) raise the temperature of the room about 10% less than an HID of equivalent power displacement in sealed conditions and external drivers/ballasts. What makes LED's so much nicer is that photon delivery is much more efficient along a two dimensional plane so it doesn't require as much power displacement to reach an equivalent level of canopy illuminance.
YMMV of course.
Could you expand on this a bit? I don't understand what you mean by '10 degrees of IR'.... It sounds interesting though.
I feel like your experiments might be a great info source but also think different makes of LED fixtures will give different heat , I .E. Lower pushed diodes on a larger heatsink with good large fans blowing actively across the heat sink will cool a LED much better than a thin Heatsink, no fans on the heatsink(passive cooling) , pushing diodes too hard, and quality of the metal you use for a heat sink.I was speaking more in general than specific examples, I guess I was a little overly vague. I'm thinking more from a conservation of energy perspective. When comparing two sources of light of equal efficiencies they're going to produce about the same amount of heat energy and raise the ambient temperatures of the room about the same amount assuming there is no mechanical means of removal(ventilation, ect) and the drivers/ballast is located externally.
From my experiments high end COBS(cree/bridgelux) raise the temperature of the room about 10% less than an HID of equivalent power displacement in sealed conditions and external drivers/ballasts. What makes LED's so much nicer is that photon delivery is much more efficient along a two dimensional plane so it doesn't require as much power displacement to reach an equivalent level of canopy illuminance.
YMMV of course.
Could you expand on this a bit? I don't understand what you mean by '10 degrees of IR'.... It sounds interesting though.