Prawn Connery
Well-Known Member
Try 11/1 - you can always go 24/0 later and compare the results.
Ah so you're saying the example is really created/tweaked solely to somehow make sense for you alone and then "prove" your point?It's a given that both the veg lamp and the flowering lamp are on every day.
No, that was not the reason why I replaced it.You obviously did it so you see 15 euro a year as worthwhile.
Sure, but I value my time higher than a few bucks per year. A few hundred a year is something that could be worth my while though.You like saving money.
No that's way too simplistic a view again. Veg happens at much lower W/m2 and lower temperatures are much more prevalent in those conditions.The same argument can be made for flowering with a more efficient lamp in colder climates. Why not just use HPS.
Just a small scale grower with a couple qb 288's running soft,nothing special.I don't know your set-up, but I do know how most people grow, and their veg times are easily half or less than their flowering times. So speeding up vegetative growth is generally not a priority.
For example, I can't even fathom this statement:
I never have an empty flowering chamber. I often have to prune my plants in veg or reclone them to fit in with my flowering schedules.
Power savings are power savings - there's no doubt, and certainly no argument on my part.
But veg lights are usually a fraction of flowering lights - easily a ratio of 1:4 or less - so even if you are running them 24/0 compared to 12/12, and even taking into account the efficiencies of a crappy CFL vs HPS, you're almost always ahead in terms of power savings if you upgrade your flowering lights.
Plus the obvious advantage is flowering lights produce bigger buds - veg lights don't. But I'm kinda tired of repeating that! People who have been growing indoors for any length of time know exactly what I'm saying.
Guys have managed to get flowers under fluorescent lights man! Sure they wouldn’t be very good. They would be small. And not very potent or smelly. But none the less it’s a flower. My point is why don’t people just get 1 light that can take your plant from seed to weed? Today the LED is king of the all in one lamp! Why waste money on 2 lamps? Ultimately your gonna pay anyway!I'm not being rude, but
So you want big, healthy plants but believe you can flower under "damn near any light" . . . OK. Good luck.
It’s not the tall that matters it’s the wide! 1 foot tall and 4 feet wide? 3 foot tall and 3 feet wide? I like em 12 feet tall and about 10 feet wide!Because weed is actually a 2D object, a full canopy of 1ft plants will yield the same as a full canopy of 3ft tall plants... Sounds legit.
This supports my theory that damn near any light can bud a plant! It’s just that some do it far better than others.Easy: flowering light
Replacing a 400W HPS with either a 600W HPS or 400W of LED should - all things being equal - result in about a 50% increase in yield (as long as you have the space).
So there you go - I've just paid for my new light with enough left over to buy a new veg light, too.
In almost every case, upgrading your flowering light - if it is sub-optimal to begin with - will result in an increase in yield. That buys a lot of electricity. It will also likely improve your smoking experience and save you time in trimming, by growing denser, higher quality flowers with less popcorn to trim around.
What does upgrading your veg light do? Seriously. You are going to flower at the same stage of growth. Getting a better veg light may get you to that stage quicker and save a couple of $ in power. It may reduce stretch, giving you a bit more head height. But if you run a perpetual cycle indoors, you have at least six weeks to veg in-between cycles (eight weeks flower less two weeks to clone or raise seeds), which is plenty of time to get to the required stage of growth with modest veg lighting.
A better veg light is not going to improve your flowering yields. Unless, as some here have mentioned, you plan to grow outside. Or use the same light to veg and flower.
But if you're using the sun to flower, or one light to veg and flower, then we're not even having the same conversation, are we? You only have one light, so there is no choice as to which to upgrade first. I don't even know why these questions were asked, hence why I didn't answer them above. It's obvious.
Without sounding like a broken record, I just don't follow the OP's logic. A better flowering light will always give you better yields, which is money in the bank to upgrade your veg light. You wouldn't put the cart before the horse, would you?
And again, I am not arguing there are not efficiencies to be gained in upgrading your veg light. I'm simply arguing there is a logical (fiscal) order in which to do it.
As for CFL's, they have their place. I'm using one to supplement UV and vertical light in a staggered grow. It was cheap - $28 or something - and LED doesn't have much UV to speak of. The buds in these photos were harvested this week and were so big when they finished that they broke quite a few branches:
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No skip the flowering light and the veg light and get one light that can do both really well!No. First spend the money on a better flowering light, and with the extra yield, pay off the better flowering light and buy a new veg light.
It's really that simple.
Horizontal or vertical light?Because weed is actually a 2D object, a full canopy of 1ft plants will yield the same as a full canopy of 3ft tall plants... Sounds legit.
Why? With all due respect, you sound like you don't have a lot of experience growing indoors, or you would know that nearly all commercial and serious hobby growers have separate cloning, vegging and flowering areas with light sources to suit. Your advice is only pertinent to people who have limited space or who grow full cycle instead of perpetual cycle.No skip the flowering light and the veg light and get one light that can do both really well!
^ This is why I had no answer to your question.Old Thcool said:So using his argument, I would actually benefit by buying a veg light because I plan to veg all winter and flower in a greenhouse throughout the summer.
BTW, a 1' SOG will outyield a 3' SCROG using more plants with less veg time. You should know that, just as you should know the reasons why. They are all explained in the link to the thread I posted.Because weed is actually a 2D object, a full canopy of 1ft plants will yield the same as a full canopy of 3ft tall plants... Sounds legit.
Agree totally, for instance my wife would move out if I budded stinky weed in the house, so that actually lends itself to vegging bigger plants that can then be moved into the greenhouse when the temps come up. For me diffused light from the sun is cheaper and I can grow bigger plants. Indoors imposes limitations on plant size. I take this winter opportunity to make cuts of any good plants I happen upon and give them to local growers to backup the strain, kinda like a living seed bank! The other growers are shall we say ( outside the legal limits) of plant count and they welcome new genetic material.Horizontal or vertical light?
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Because if light doesn't reach part of the canopy, it does not develop and eventually dies off.
Try growing some plants, and you will see what I mean. If you veg a plant too big for your flowering light, you have just wasted time and energy. There is an optimal point for any given flowering light intensity over any given footprint for any particular strain for any particular style of grow that will produce a given yield. It is up to you, as the grower, to discover what that optimal point is depending on your system.
That is if you wish to grow efficiently and are not just vegging to fill in time in-between flowering cycles.
I said in a separate post that I would have two areas each with multi purpose lights so you could leave your plants in the room full cycle while the other room is in veg / cloning. Having a full spectrum LED in both rooms gives the ultimate in versatility. My buddies have slowly switching their street lights for full spectrum LED for just that reason, they don’t have to move plants once in the room they stay in the room. The only thing many use that isn’t LED is T5-8 lights for clones. I’m not disputing what you say, but as a business man and being old I have learned that investing in the right quality tools to do the job is money well spent. I do not believe that commercial weed growers would prefer to have to move things if they didn’t have to. Ideally a commercial set up requires a minimum of 9 rooms! A tech room for pumps, fertilizer injectors, power and HVAC, a clone/ veg room, 3 flowering rooms for perpetual cropping and a trim room with drying/ product storage safe, a bathroom and a staff room for lunch etc. Ideally an on-site office for security and needed clerical stuff. Yeah dude I know what it takes to produce weed I started smoking weed in 1976 in Cali as a kid do the math.Why? With all due respect, you sound like you don't have a lot of experience growing indoors, or you would know that nearly all commercial and serious hobby growers have separate cloning, vegging and flowering areas with light sources to suit. Your advice is only pertinent to people who have limited space or who grow full cycle instead of perpetual cycle.
As I said, I wasn't trying to be rude, but one minute you were saying that according to churchhaze's logic you would be better off spending the money on a veg light, and the next you were telling us you were finishing your plants outdoors!
It was a non-sequitur. You don't need to spend money on a flowering light, because you don't use one.
^ This is why I had no answer to your question.
Which part? Also do you like the Rouge or the Escape if you were to buy.I started smoking weed in 1976 in Cali as a kid
Sorry can you give more information I don’t know what you are asking?Which part? Also do you like the Rouge or the Escape if you were to buy.
Sorry op not trying to change subject, just thought it went into the same line of thinking.
Again, I think we are talking at cross purposes.Agree totally, for instance my wife would move out if I budded stinky weed in the house, so that actually lends itself to vegging bigger plants that can then be moved into the greenhouse when the temps come up. For me diffused light from the sun is cheaper and I can grow bigger plants. Indoors imposes limitations on plant size. I take this winter opportunity to make cuts of any good plants I happen upon and give them to local growers to backup the strain, kinda like a living seed bank! The other growers are shall we say ( outside the legal limits) of plant count and they welcome new genetic material.
I don’t agree that it doesn’t really matter how long you veg a plant. It definitely does matter. If you have the time, space and light a bigger plant makes more weed it’s that simple. I do agree that you need to use the space and light properly to max your harvest. Even outdoor growers need to space plants out.