A 6x6 isn't two times bigger than a 3x3, it's four times bigger. 3x3=9, 6x6=36. I've been equating a meter to 3', but it's really 3.28', so for the below info I'm going to use that value.First of all,thabks for reply.But i dont understsnt at all you math....not really.
I mean your math says that 500w led in 1x1 meter (3x3) is at low end....and i thing thats not correct...500w for a 3x3 space should more than enough...
So what u recommend for my 6x6 space?
I only know the led wattage rule of thumb for square feet, but If 1 square foot = 0.092 square meters and you're looking for a minimum of 30W of led light per square foot then we can convert and say you're looking for a minimum of 322.92W per square meter. Let's call it 320W.
So if you have a 2 meter x 2 meter area, or 4 square meters you're looking for 320x4 or 1280W, and that's the recommended minimum. Could you grow in less? Absolutely, but if you're going to put in the time and effort and you're allotting that much space to grow you're probably going to want to maximize your yields.
As far as a recommendation, like Rocket Soul was suggesting you're probably better off with several smaller lights. Which ones exactly, I'm not sure. I'm thinking 4x lights suitable for a 1x1meter area. the problem with most of the lights is that they're made up of several 120W boards that are rectangular. With one you can light a square well. With two they can arrange them light a square or a rectangle when they design them. Four gives you a nice square again, but you can't arrange three equal sized rectangles and get a nice square shape.
Here's a picture of that so you see what I mean: https://kingbriteled.en.alibaba.com/productgrouplist-817274864-1/QB288_Board_320W.html?spm=a2700.icbuShop.41413.23.60661f00ofFpEO&filter=null
If you could get 4x320W lights that were square shaped that'd be pretty good, but a quick glance shows me they're mostly real long and marketed to the 2x4' crowd. 2x2 meters is a huge area. It might be overkill, but I'd consider 4x480W "square" quantum board lights. You could always dim the a bit. Any one light source is going to give you a ton of light near the center and much less at the edges. That's like 44W per square foot or 480W per square meter.