Humanrob
Well-Known Member
I'm still new to this, I'm not trying to start an argument (and hopefully people can keep this civil), I'm just relating my experience and trying to understand the fundamentals about how plants use different kinds of light, and what is the measure of a truly healthy plant.
One of my first LEDs was a cheap Chinese light (170+/- real watts), in the "it was cool at the time" red/blue configuration. I had a plant under that for several weeks, and it was growing very slowly, had very dark leaves, and the space between nodes was next to nothing, it was very dense.
I then "upgraded" to an Optic Vero COB (120W), and within a day or two the plant changed (still on 18/6). It began to grow upward very quickly, the new growth was pale green, and the space between nodes got much larger. So a plant that was not getting much taller but was getting thicker and denser, is acting as though I switched to 12/12 and is opening up and stretching (but I haven't switched the timing at all).
My initial response was to think that the Optic was under-powered, and the plant was stretching because it was not getting enough light. But based on all the threads here on "quality of light", that seems unlikely. As a side note, the distance between the plant and the lights has been consistent (around 12").
Any idea why the red/blue would have the growth pattern it provided, and the Optic produced such different results? Was the plant "happier" or healthier under just the old light, i.e. getting more of what it needed?
Oddly, I had similar growth patterns with my very first LED experiment, a Home Depot shop light (149w 4000k). It gave me very dense, dark, short thick plants when I vegged under it. Very slow growth, but heavy foliage. If the space between nodes were the primary measure of healthy plants, then at this point the HD shop light is outperforming the COB... (at least in veg).
Which is why I'm asking, what is the measure of a healthy plant?
One of my first LEDs was a cheap Chinese light (170+/- real watts), in the "it was cool at the time" red/blue configuration. I had a plant under that for several weeks, and it was growing very slowly, had very dark leaves, and the space between nodes was next to nothing, it was very dense.
I then "upgraded" to an Optic Vero COB (120W), and within a day or two the plant changed (still on 18/6). It began to grow upward very quickly, the new growth was pale green, and the space between nodes got much larger. So a plant that was not getting much taller but was getting thicker and denser, is acting as though I switched to 12/12 and is opening up and stretching (but I haven't switched the timing at all).
My initial response was to think that the Optic was under-powered, and the plant was stretching because it was not getting enough light. But based on all the threads here on "quality of light", that seems unlikely. As a side note, the distance between the plant and the lights has been consistent (around 12").
Any idea why the red/blue would have the growth pattern it provided, and the Optic produced such different results? Was the plant "happier" or healthier under just the old light, i.e. getting more of what it needed?
Oddly, I had similar growth patterns with my very first LED experiment, a Home Depot shop light (149w 4000k). It gave me very dense, dark, short thick plants when I vegged under it. Very slow growth, but heavy foliage. If the space between nodes were the primary measure of healthy plants, then at this point the HD shop light is outperforming the COB... (at least in veg).
Which is why I'm asking, what is the measure of a healthy plant?
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