Discreetdigrowman
Well-Known Member
I never stated that pic was a true sine wave or a pure sine wave its a dc waveform pictured what are we arguing i never stated there isnt pure sine waves just wanted to prove that dc waveforms do exist
Sorry boss, I was under the impression you wanted to read the DC side of the driver. @Humple the meter I suggested was to read the DC side of the driver, If you want an AC suggestion just let me know and I can spec one out. or the one like dannykay posted will be sufficient.My mate is running these for a few weeks now, connected to the AC side of the driver.
Another member from this forum is also using these in his setup connected to the AC side, @T-Time , care to share?
No worries mate, thanks for the heads up in any case.Sorry boss, I was under the impression you wanted to read the DC side of the driver. @Humple the meter I suggested was to read the DC side of the driver, If you want an AC suggestion just let me know and I can spec one out. or the one like dannykay posted will be sufficient.
Pop i dont want to argue anymore, your 100 percent right about ac rectified to dc, and true dc sources have almost no wave, could you please give me a book or a link that gives that definition of a sine wave.my statement was there is no DC sine wave. The only waveform in that graph considered a sinewave is the ac waveform. You can call it what you want, but a sinewave on a graph or oscilloscope needs to have a curve above and below zero. This curve is created by the rise and fall of current and the reversal of polarity. D.C. never changes polarity, there for, the curve is not considered a sinewave. And a D.C. waveform like in the graph would be produced by low end ac/dc conversion such as a rectifier and transfomer. Class one D.C. power sources produce an almost flat line. A battery produces no wave at all, just a steadily declining curve
Pop i dont want to argue anymore, your 100 percent right about ac rectified to dc, and true dc sources have almost no wave, could you please give me a book or a link that gives that definition of a sine wave.
Damn lol your gonna regret that call to your credit card company.
I entered some quantum board grown bud into a highly respected UK Cannabis Cup and managed to sneak in to joint 5th place this weekend (out of 22). As you can see from the strain list below it was made up of highly respected UK growers and breeders.
View attachment 4056978
The Cup only releases the top 3 placements and I wasn't one of those so I asked for some feedback and I got this....
....you came joint 5th and got an 8 and and 8.5 from the judges and they both commented it was dense with a good amount of trichomes, smelt and tasted good and was a very clean smoke/vape
Nice one HLG those boards producing some
I'd do 3k and 4kIf I am looking to do a grow from seed to harvest with one/two light spectrums, what would they be?
3000k and _____?
4000k?
5000k?
Well if your using one rig I agree with @keepsake 3k & 4kIf I am looking to do a grow from seed to harvest with one/two light spectrums, what would they be?
3000k and _____?
4000k?
5000k?
Ok, so if I were to build out a 2 QB panel, 1x 3000k + 1x 4000k, and 1x 3000k + 1x 4000k, for a total of 4 boards, each panel running on hlg-240/185, in a 2x4, I should get good results?I'd do 3k and 4k