I think that it will actually produce less heat.Do you folks think a LEC 315 will put off a great deal more heat than a uncooled bare 250w HPS/MH bulb with remote ballast?
What's 'a great deal more'? Based on spectrum and lamp efficiency, I think the two will be comparable. Your grow room design will make a bigger difference; I know my room is performing well when the temps don't rise but the RH does.Do you folks think a LEC 315 will put off a great deal more heat than a uncooled bare 250w HPS/MH bulb with remote ballast?
I believe the latter is an HIDI did some calculation and typical 250W (Philips SON-T in this case) should produce about 178W of heat while 315W Philips CDM-T Elite Agro (is that the one?) puts out about 188W of heat.
So is the former. MH, CMH, HPS, all types of HID.I believe the latter is an HID
yes. But hps and mh use an aluminum arc. And CMH use a ceramic arc.So is the former. MH, CMH, HPS, all types of HID.
Sure, they aren't all the same thing, but they are all types of HID. And some (pre-cmh) MH use Quartz, which if they followed the by Sun trademarked wordplay on LED should be called LEQ. Light Emitting Ceramic (Device) is something completely different (printable sheets of light.)yes. But hps and mh use an aluminum arc. And CMH use a ceramic arc.
Which one out of the bunch, today, boasts the highest efficiency?Sure, they aren't all the same thing, but they are all types of HID. And some (pre-cmh) MH use Quartz, which if they followed the by Sun trademarked wordplay on LED should be called LEQ. Light Emitting Ceramic (Device) is something completely different (printable sheets of light.)
It's not just the total of the photons emitted you should be concerned with; for instance, HPS lamps emit most of their light in the orange, yellow and green posts of the spectrum- which plants can't use well if at all.Which one out of the bunch, today, boasts the highest efficiency?
I'm under the impression that it's the LEC but would like to read your thoughts.
Get a 315W LEC setup. You will love the results.I have the tent in a 7x2x7.5 closet in my house. I could get a taller tent (3x2x7 or 4x2x7) for flower and use the existing for veg if I run into vertical constraints. I appreciate everyone opinions. Thank you.
This is actually somewhat of a misconception. If green, yellow, and orange really weren't used well, why would HPS be considered the benchmark everyone's trying to beat? HPS has a very high photon output, a high rad. efficiency, and a very good spectrum for growing tall, sun loving plants.It's not just the total of the photons emitted you should be concerned with; for instance, HPS lamps emit most of their light in the orange, yellow and green posts of the spectrum- which plants can't use well if at all.
Plants need to get light in the far red and blue/indigo ends of the visible light spectrum in order to grow, and this is where the advantage of the newer types of HID lamps lies.
Don't be suckered by how bright HPS light looks to YOU, your eyes aren't trying to use chlorophyll to synthesize food.
The new types of HID lamps are thus not only somewhat more efficient at converting watts into umols of light, but DRASTICALLY better at emitting that light in directs the plants can use.
Only LED can be better, and even then it's not guaranteed- and it is also currently more expensive on a watt for watt or light emitted basis.
Look closer; those photos of the wrong wavelength hit something, get absorbed... and then re-radiated- as HEAT. That heat then stimulates transpiration, which draws nutrients up the stem.This is actually somewhat of a misconception. If green, yellow, and orange really weren't used well, why would HPS be considered the benchmark everyone's trying to beat? HPS has a very high photon output, a high rad. efficiency, and a very good spectrum for growing tall, sun loving plants.
People get too hung up on the absorbance of chloraphyll and assume how well a wavelength is absorbed means the same thing as how effective that wavelength is. If a green photon is not absorbed by the top canopy layer, it will either transmit and be absorbed by the next layer down, or bounce off the walls a few times until it hits the top canopy again. If there's one thing people have learned from R+B leds, it's that they make "Great veg lamps". It's not just because they're weak... R+B light can not grow tall plants, even at high intensities because the top layer canopy will become saturated, and the bottom of the plant will receive very little light. (of course with vert this is different, but the concept is still the same. red nor blue doesn't penetrate or reflect well, it absorbs.)
You should do both LEC and DIY led. I've always suggested people setup a prototype first.@churchhaze I'm getting some of these 315W LEC lighting kits and I'll be running them against baseline results from HPS lighting run on both magnetic and conventional electronic ballasts.
I'm also interested in getting some square wave ballasts to run 860W CDM lamps that I have, to see if I can improve their performance. They're already known to improve the performance of both conventional HPS and MH lamps.
And, I'm still interested in the LED project.
The rate of photosyntehsis is not what plants use to determine whether they're sleeping or not. That's determined by the level of Pfr/(Pfr+Pr). Green light sets that to about 50%. Red light sets it to about 85%, and 730nm sets it to ~0%. This works very similar to color vision with 2 cones.Look closer; those photos of the wrong wavelength hit something, get absorbed... and then re-radiated- as HEAT. That heat then stimulates transpiration, which draws nutrients up the stem.
If what you did was true, then green lamps would upset the plant's dark cycle, and of course they don't.