I'm guessing those are the 700nm diodes
Looks like one LED in each cube isn't lit..what's up with that or am I missing something ?
yes its the 700nm its inferred, we humans cant see it, farered is the 660nm
so what your saying, is that the 630nm is the "most" important/effectiv for flowering ?
I was in the believe it was the 640nm of course supported by 630 and even 620
and that the 660 (as I read, I believe, is fare red ?) is for the "Emerson" effect or sumthing a like
the 700nm was to mix in some inferred (was`t to sure about that one, knew I should have done even more research)
the 6500K was to both have some "true white" to hit all the spectrum and to make up for the lack of blue`s, had to skip two to get one more 640 and one more 660 in to the mixture and since I veg with T5HO in 6500K it also make sense to use, as fare as I know 6500K is also more "effective" then other whites (etc. warm white/2700k)
what would be your mixture if you should put 120x3W together and you had a box full of all the chips/LEDs you could imagine
Green Light Drives Leaf Photosynthesis More Efficiently than Red Light in Strong White Light: Revisiting the Enigmatic Question of Why Leaves are Green (2009)
http://pcp.oxfordjournals.org/content/50/4/684.full.pdf
slipon, here is a more readable Version over green light.
http://www.heliospectra.com/sites/www.heliospectra.com/files/field_page_attachments/what_light_do_plants_need_2012-10-05.pdf
How about this combination for 3 feet x 3feetSeveral White LEDs available for the last couple years provide as much PAR as B/Rs.
The problem (of false science) stems from R/Bs were the first diodes made and some idiot (with pseudo authority) sold the mj lighting industry the idea that the only spectrums mmj needs are the R/B peaks, AND, the rest are a waste, including that Green was not important.
I showed you where the important flowering spectrum is 630. And since WW can produce ample 630, well, the spectrum beyond it is not the be-all-end-all. In fact there are several completed grows using only CREE WWs, which coincidentally have a broad 630
Undoing that early programming has been difficult, but the winds are changing.
I think it's possible. I'm working on LED panels. Next LED project will be mostly whites with red/blue in lower ratio like 10 white:4 red:2 blue. I like having more white in a spectrum than red/blue.Fonzarelli- Do you think it's possible to mimic your results with only LED's? Have you ever tried in the past?
ETA: Have you ever tried supplementing the sun itself with LED light?
What huge advancement? AFAIK white LEDs still only contain 1 single blue peak and mostly yellow/green wavelengths, except for a few WW and NW that peak at 630nm. What advancements have they made since XML or XTE?Reboot your computer (aka, brain). Due to HUGE advancements in white diodes,
Aren't there a larger variety of Phosphor coatings being played with now? For example, the implementation of REEs into the phsophor mix, creating a wider array of possible spectra.What huge advancement? AFAIK white LEDs still only contain 1 single blue peak and mostly yellow/green wavelengths, except for a few WW and NW that peak at 630nm. What advancements have they made since XML or XTE?