videoman40
Well-Known Member
Hey everyone! I almost hate to post in this thread, as it has gotten fairly heated. I think there is alot of misinformation being posted here though.
While I do think LED's are exciting, I have read several grow journals, and believe that it is several years way still. Technology is always improving, and I don't want to be an early investor in this technology as its very expensive, and the results arent there yet. In fact I see alot of growers growing with LED's using cfl's too to get the needed light to produce anything useful.
On another note, RichardDawson, while the 1000 light is not the best choice, a 600 I believe is, your analogy that the 1000 only puts out "a measley 124 watts" is total misinformation dude! You should stop passing that sort of misinformation around.
Using your formua, a 400 wall light would rank somewhere around a 25 watt cfl!
While it is true that a large amount, not quite 50%, of HPS light is in spectrums not used for photosynthesis. This however does not really mean that one can just deduct that percentage of lumens from the total. Lumens are a human measurement of light based on the wavelengths visible to our eye. PAR measures the photosynthetically active spectrum for plants, this means that it measures the light energy available for the plant to photosynthesize. Even if the spectrums of HPS light are not all usable they still provide an amount of light energy for photosynthesis equal to several times the energy available from the sun at plant growing ranges and equal to the sun up to several feet away.
While I do think LED's are exciting, I have read several grow journals, and believe that it is several years way still. Technology is always improving, and I don't want to be an early investor in this technology as its very expensive, and the results arent there yet. In fact I see alot of growers growing with LED's using cfl's too to get the needed light to produce anything useful.
On another note, RichardDawson, while the 1000 light is not the best choice, a 600 I believe is, your analogy that the 1000 only puts out "a measley 124 watts" is total misinformation dude! You should stop passing that sort of misinformation around.
Using your formua, a 400 wall light would rank somewhere around a 25 watt cfl!
While it is true that a large amount, not quite 50%, of HPS light is in spectrums not used for photosynthesis. This however does not really mean that one can just deduct that percentage of lumens from the total. Lumens are a human measurement of light based on the wavelengths visible to our eye. PAR measures the photosynthetically active spectrum for plants, this means that it measures the light energy available for the plant to photosynthesize. Even if the spectrums of HPS light are not all usable they still provide an amount of light energy for photosynthesis equal to several times the energy available from the sun at plant growing ranges and equal to the sun up to several feet away.