desplegado
Well-Known Member
Hello I'm a new grower and I just wondering ab light % what percent during each stage and height
dont use the apps they not work correct without adjusting...or not buy a lux meter...Hello I'm a new grower and I just wondering ab light % what percent during each stage and height
People keep saying this but unless you're going maximum efficiency and CO2 this does not matter. The photonapp works good enough that you get the general idea of what your light is at.dont use the apps they not work correct without adjusting...or not buy a lux meter...
which led you have?
i got 150 watt led 50cm away from plant with 25% 37,5 watt...in vegetative stge...
It's not it's the vipar spectra xs1500 proYou're going to have to provide more info than that. You can usually find the hanging height on the manufacturer's website.
Ok I didn't know if I needed a lux or par I've been searchingGet a lux meter and you will get pinpoint accuracy or check manufacturers recommendations like Handy advised.
Vipar spectra xs1500prodont use the apps they not work correct without adjusting...or not buy a lux meter...
which led you have?
i got 150 watt led 50cm away from plant with 25% 37,5 watt...in vegetative stge...
I dont think my phone will work with itNo you don't need a paper diffuser. You're perpetuating old stuff. I use it just fine and it gives me an idea where the ppfd is without blowing 400+$
Weirdly enough migro tested it against multiple different meters. And it's fairly close to reading like the apogee meter. That was 3 years ago. Things get updated and things get fixed.
150 watts. It’s not much so stay close to the plant.Vipar spectra xs1500pro
There starting flower there growing there pistils
109% at 16" distanceVipar spectra xs1500pro
There starting flower there growing there pistils
U mean 100% at 16 in? There just starting to grow there pistils109% at 16" distance
If you can afford a PAR meter that's even betterOk I didn't know if I needed a lux or par I've been searching
When I tested Korona (before it was renamed Photone), the diffuser was not needed for Android but, if you're using an iPhone and not using a diffuser, your results will be even more inaccurate. It's a function of how the sensor in the iPhone read light.No you don't need a paper diffuser. You're perpetuating old stuff. I use it just fine and it gives me an idea where the ppfd is without blowing 400+$
Weirdly enough migro tested it against multiple different meters. And it's fairly close to reading like the apogee meter. That was 3 years ago. Things get updated and things get fixed.
It depends on the model. I have an iPhone XSMax (don't laugh!). When I tested Photone against my blurple in 2021, it failed. When I tested it in 2022 against my Growcraft, it read 16% high.I dont think my phone will work with it
I have no idea what I'm reading here in the attachmentIt depends on the model. I have an iPhone XSMax (don't laugh!). When I tested Photone against my blurple in 2021, it failed. When I tested it in 2022 against my Growcraft, it read 16% high.
What turned me off was the need for the diffuser. It's a work around for how the iPhone is designed. Now that they're selling a clip on diffuser, it's less of a kludge and, if it was more accurate, I could see its value.
To my way of thinking, for $32 I can get a Uni-T light meter that has an accuracy of 5%±, according to the manufacturer. That value can be plugged converted to PPFD, per the document I've written attached. Most of the data in the document is on the internet but there are a few values that I've determined by testing using my calibrated Apogee.
The bigger issue - what's the value of measuring light?
For historic purposes, it's really handy because it makes it easy to do what you did before. It also lets you know how well your grow is set up — if you can't get at least 800µmol on your grow, there's probably something that you should fix in your grow. But the bottom line is…
A light meter can tell you how much light is hitting your canopy but your plants will tell you how much light they can use.
Some grows max out at 500µmol. And those, two, grows had been watered improperly and parts of the soil were hyrophobic so that plants could not tolerate even 600µmol.
Other grows will handle more than the 800-1000µmol level that is commonly considered the light saturation point for mature cannabis. Should a grower stop increasing light levels once the meter reads, say, 900µmol? To my way of thinking, no. The number doesn't control how the plant react. If your plants are doing well at 1000, feed them more light because there's a direct relationship between DLI and crop yield and crop quality, up to the light saturation point (the light level above which a plant cannot process the incoming photons).
The stage of a cannabis plant is a handy guide but that's all. Cannabis iU mean 100% at 16 in? There just starting to grow there pistils
Lux # PPFDI have no idea what I'm reading here in the attachment
Is ppfd next to the names and the lux it is or somewhat the top like the 10,000?It depends on the model. I have an iPhone XSMax (don't laugh!). When I tested Photone against my blurple in 2021, it failed. When I tested it in 2022 against my Growcraft, it read 16% high.
What turned me off was the need for the diffuser. It's a work around for how the iPhone is designed. Now that they're selling a clip on diffuser, it's less of a kludge and, if it was more accurate, I could see its value.
To my way of thinking, for $32 I can get a Uni-T light meter that has an accuracy of 5%±, according to the manufacturer. That value can be plugged converted to PPFD, per the document I've written attached. Most of the data in the document is on the internet but there are a few values that I've determined by testing using my calibrated Apogee.
The bigger issue - what's the value of measuring light?
For historic purposes, it's really handy because it makes it easy to do what you did before. It also lets you know how well your grow is set up — if you can't get at least 800µmol on your grow, there's probably something that you should fix in your grow. But the bottom line is…
A light meter can tell you how much light is hitting your canopy but your plants will tell you how much light they can use.
Some grows max out at 500µmol. And those, two, grows had been watered improperly and parts of the soil were hyrophobic so that plants could not tolerate even 600µmol.
Other grows will handle more than the 800-1000µmol level that is commonly considered the light saturation point for mature cannabis. Should a grower stop increasing light levels once the meter reads, say, 900µmol? To my way of thinking, no. The number doesn't control how the plant react. If your plants are doing well at 1000, feed them more light because there's a direct relationship between DLI and crop yield and crop quality, up to the light saturation point (the light level above which a plant cannot process the incoming photons).