I have reservations about spectrums with these massive red spikes relative to the other colors. I’m currently using the R4 spectrum from Fluence and was able to run long and short flowering plants at 1500-1700 ppfd (Edit: without CO2 supplement) without stress or issue and the yield and quality are some of the best I’ve had (living soil/water only). I feel if the spectrum is imbalanced and weighted too much towards the red end, plants tend to exhibit photooxidation and photoinhibition at lower ppfds than a more balanced spectrum (relative intensity of the different spectra) still including the same nanometers. While I agree that the addition of far red and UVA is no doubt beneficial overall, if there is too much of either relative to the rest of the spectrum, potential photosynthetic efficacy is diminished. With the red heavy spectrums, photosystems I & II get overworked by the quantity of red photons, and therefore can’t do the repair work they are supposed to as efficiently under higher flux conditions. This is probably why you are seeing oxidative stress above 1200 ppfd. Just my personal perspective based on lots of reading and trials under different spectrums. Not shilling for Fluence, but I picked up the Spydr series mainly because of the spectrum, secondly because of the output, and certainly not because of the price. Compared to modern sun-like LED chips, their spectrum isn’t even that broad, but it is fairly balanced compared to most commercial fixtures. My 2 cents
Again, apologies for being late to the party, but I'm limited for posting time these days. However, these threads do at least give me an excuse to research!
So I guess the first question is, if you are growing cannabis, what light level do you use to flower without supplementary CO2 and how do you measure it? You've run both short and long-day plants between 1500-1700 PPFD, so it would be good know what variety of plants you've grown, and – if cannabis – which cultivars.
The second question is, if you are growing under 1700 umol/j without supplementary CO2, are you getting twice the yield compared to, say 850 umol/j? The point being, at what level are you seeing diminishing returns? This is going to segue a little bit with what I'm about to write, so please don't think I'm putting you on the spot! I'm genuinely curious about your results.
That said, I don't disagree with the premise of over-saturaing chloroplasts with narrow-band spectra, but there are a few things to consider.
Chloroplasts are dynamic – they actually move around inside plant cells and can orientate themselves to capture more light or to avoid it if intensity is high. This is a facinating short read:
https://books.google.com.au/books?id=aQR__H2XBnUC&pg=PA236&lpg=PA236#v=onepage&q&f=false
But for the TLDR cowd, here is a diagram to explain what I mean. The square box is the plant cell, and the grey dots are chloroplasts. In strong light, the chloroplasts turn sideways and align themselve around the outer edges of the cell to allow light to pass through without being absorbed. In low light, they turn horizontal and align themselves in layers in such a way that any light that passes through the first layer is captured by the second layer:
The point of mentioning this is that, although yields may increase with light intensity up to a certain level, photosynthetic efficiency also starts to drop off at some point.
Chloroplasts are also dynamic in that they can alter the production of each pigment to take advantage of certain spectra or to protect themselves from intense narrow band photons. We've all seen this: healthy leaves exhibiting a dark dreen/blue hue in the presence of bluer light (Metal Halide or high CCT LED) and a lighter green hue in the presence of red/yellow light (HPS or low CCT LED).
And you are entirely correct about a balanced spectrum being the best. The only point of difference is "what is a balanced spectrum"?
Chloroplasts are dynamic because sunlight is dynamic. It may be around 5700K at noon, but it varies between that and ~2000K at the beginning and end of each day. On average, sunlight is probably around 3500-4000K throughout any given day. This will change with different seasons, latitudes, altitudes, weather and atmospheric events. You get the idea.
Chloroplasts change because sunlight changes.
So which is the best sunlight spectrum? Is it Spring/Autumn when the days are shorter and redder? Is it in the middle of summer at noon when the UV index is highest? Or do we need different spectra at different stages of growth?
One thing that is missing from a lot of LED grow lights is Far Red – which is crazy IMO. Sunlight from 400-800nm has 25% Far Red light! Many LEDs have almost none and most have very little, with red: far red ratios of 12:1 or higher. Our lights have less than 4:1 (11% Far Red).
Disclaimer time: if you don't already know, I am affiliated with Grow Lights Australia and do a lot of their testing.
Far Red increases photosynthetic efficiency in many ways, one of which is by quenching chloroplasts to enable them to absorb more light without oxidation – especially in relation to red photons.
Plant photosynthetic capacity directly determines crop yield. Light quality regulates photosynthetic capacity. This review discusses plant responses t…
www.sciencedirect.com
At the other end of the spectrum, UVA, Violet and Blue counter some of the underdsirable cell-expansion properties of additional Far Red such as excessive stretch, whilst still encouraging larger leaf area. Which is why plants don't stretch under full sun even though it is 25% Far Red.
All of this, however, is a bit moot in the face of grow stats. The best spectrum is the one that gives the best metrics. It is here that opinions may vary. You can tweak your spectra to produce more dry yield or higher cannabinoid and/or terpene content, because it appears there is always a trade-off between these two photomorphogenic responses depending on which end of the spectrum you favour – although I believe the secret is to balance both ends by including UVA and Far Red and also trying to increase Cyan (which is almost impossible to do efficiently with current LED technology).
And yes, may be right that the best spectrum is the one that allows you to push the most photons with a linear – or even absolute – increase in yield until you get to the point of diminishing returns.
What I can say is we've tested R4 type spectra against our own and our yeilds have been better – at least within the parameters we set, which was around 800 PPFD at the canopy when scrogged. Obviously it makes a difference if most of your canopy is getter 800PPFD compared to Christmas tree style growing where the top cola gets 1200 PPFD but most of the lower plant only gets 400-600 PPFD.
Here's the test:
https://www.rollitup.org/t/growdown-mars-hydro-vs-grow-lights-australia.1076599/
This one was only a difference of about 7% in our favour, but we've run these before with similar and better results conducted by growers with a bit more experience than the guy who grew these out ^.
Here are the spectra used.