RickWhite
Well-Known Member
I like light rails. I like the way they cover more area and I like the way light hits the plants at infinite angles. I believe these angles result in greater penetration. Envision a light passing over a leaf - it shines underneath it as well as on top of it.
Anyway, in trying to come up with the best light arrangement for use with a rail, I began thinking. Why not buy reflective sheets and just build a giant reflector tunnel on the ceiling?
That way one could just suspend bulbs from the rail and let the bulb traverse inside the reflector. This could even serve as a vertical + horizontal setup giving the best of both worlds.
Envision two rows of 9 large plants. The rail is in between the rows with the bulb just lower than the tops of the plants (inside the natural V shape). On the outside of the two rows are large reflective panels on a 45 deg or so angle so that the light reflects down from the other side.
This would be like a huge hood with the plants growing up inside it. If one had three rows they could even use two bulbs like this:
/ ^ () ^ () ^ \
Where ^ = rows and ()= bulbs.
And one can get as elaborate as one wants. One could even build a pentagon shaped tunnel that would reflect light up as well. And the panels are cheep and light weight. I found foam panels with dimpled aluminum at Lowe's, or one could make them from Mylar.
What do you think?
Anyway, in trying to come up with the best light arrangement for use with a rail, I began thinking. Why not buy reflective sheets and just build a giant reflector tunnel on the ceiling?
That way one could just suspend bulbs from the rail and let the bulb traverse inside the reflector. This could even serve as a vertical + horizontal setup giving the best of both worlds.
Envision two rows of 9 large plants. The rail is in between the rows with the bulb just lower than the tops of the plants (inside the natural V shape). On the outside of the two rows are large reflective panels on a 45 deg or so angle so that the light reflects down from the other side.
This would be like a huge hood with the plants growing up inside it. If one had three rows they could even use two bulbs like this:
/ ^ () ^ () ^ \
Where ^ = rows and ()= bulbs.
And one can get as elaborate as one wants. One could even build a pentagon shaped tunnel that would reflect light up as well. And the panels are cheep and light weight. I found foam panels with dimpled aluminum at Lowe's, or one could make them from Mylar.
What do you think?