i would say 32+ is all bad for your plants 35 will stop growth completlyGrowth probably stops somewhere around 38-40 Celsius (while just starting to slowing down around 32+ Celsius). Converted from Fahrenheit numbers so might be a little off.
wow your on of those growers that really likes to push the evelope arent you ..lol thats hotBefore buying a good fan I was hitting over 100 f girls seem to do fine.No different than hot summer days.
Should be fine even if not optimal. Just for perspective, I've had plants make it through long periods of 100+ degree heat outdoors with temps being in the upper 90s most of the summer. They did seem to slow down at those temps, but it didn't kill them. Although, sativa dominant strains are going to do better than indica dominant strains at higher temperatures, so your mileage may vary.thr highest my temp in my tent gets in 89F, but thats with plently of air circulation and it doesnt seem too hot under the 250... so is it ok to have these high temps if there is a fan blowing in between the light and the canopy?
I'm going to disagree here. Hot days in my grow room get up to 32C/90F and my buds aren't airy. I'm not even sure that stretching is even relevant in this case as in the winter, my plants are structurally the same as they are in the summer where I sometimes see high temps. As always, there are a variety of factors and YMMV.Anything above 30 Celsius/86 Fahrenheit should be avoided. Such high temperatures result in stretchy plants with smaller, airy buds.
Some strains will handle high temperatures better than others. What must be understood is that high temperatures in an indoor grow room are more potentially devastating to the plants growing within it, as opposed to plants growing outside in a hot environment. Outside the temperatures fluctuate depending on the position of the sun in the sky, and local whether patterns. There is also constant airflow to plants which are grown in an open atmosphere.
Indoors, carbon dioxide is quickly depleted from the air and it is just stagnant. If you want to grow in temperature exceeding 90 degrees, carbon dioxide enrichment becomes a necessity.
it's not the same thing indoors and outdoors,outdoors temperatures rises over 30c just for a few hours,also ventilation is much better outdoors but indoors, high temperatures last for 18hrs at least thus damaging the plant.i had 3 easy ryders in a grow room while summer,with temperatures of 38c,sometimes even 40c for 18hrs a day and the plants got shitty without a lot of thc,tasteless and not potent at all.i'm quite sure high temperatures affects badly the quality of the final product.Before buying a good fan I was hitting over 100 f girls seem to do fine.No different than hot summer days.
i def agree with u homebrewer, i mean guys lets get real, the outdoors gets wayyy hotter than 86, and yes i know that the airflow and breeze in endless but still, even in a hot growroom, as long as there is plenty of circulation and a breeze for the ladies, growth should not stop nor be halted.