Ok so here is a question for you guys. I always used a chart similar to the one below when hanging my lights before when I started out and haven't measured actually distance in forever, just read the plants, but over the years have seen so many successful beautiful looking grows with their lights hanging way higher than what I thought would even work, like sometimes 4 feet above canopy. For example my new cobs say 18 inches from canopy but I see people with blurples hanging 4 feet up. What gives?
Grow Light | Closest | ~ Sunlight | Furthest |
150W | 8″ (20cm) | 10″ (25cm) | 12″ (30cm) |
250W | 10″ (25cm) | 12″ (30cm) | 14″ (35cm) |
400W | 12″ (30cm) | 14″ (35cm) | 19″ (48cm) |
600W | 14″ (35cm) | 16″ (41cm) | 25″ (64cm) |
1000W | 16″ (41cm) | 22″ (55cm) | 31″ (79cm) |
Assuming each light is the same wattage / intensity:
Point Light / Single source lights - COBs & HIDs & narrow qb's - "hard" light, distinct, hard lined shadows, good penetration, poor coverage / spread.
Soft Lights - Bars, larger boards, and combinations - Soft to no shadows, shadows wrap around curved objects, less penetration, excellent coverage / spread.
Diffused lights / reflectors / bounces - we don't use these as sources, but reflective surfaces (Tent walls, panda film, etc.) act as bounces & reflectors for us.
Point lights and boards like my cheap chinese burples create pools of intense light that fall off quickly.
Soft lights spread evenly but lack the intensity of point lights - UNLESS you use more wattage to achieve the same intensity over the whole canopy.
My DIY dreams right now are per-plant COBs, with strips / bars lower and angled for optimum coverage.