am pretty certain its blue for veggin and red for flowering"General concensus seems to be blue spectrum for vegging and red spectrum for flowering." - Are you sure that one is right ?
As far as I know, red spectrum is for vegging (miming summer sunlight) and blue spectrum for flowering (miming autumn light). If I'm mistaking I'll just have to apologize. But I remember I red one "how to" topic here somewhere and it said the same thing (red - vegging | blue - flowering).
With CFLs, you need the DUAL SPECTRUM, red and blue spectrums. That does not refer to the color of the bulb that you see. It refers to the kind of rays, like UVA or UVB, or the color temp, called kevins.
CFLS come in 2700 kevins, 3000, 4100, 5100, and 6500.
Low Kevins, the RED Spectrum, like a 2700k is for BLOOM OR FLOWERING , 6500k is the VEG Blue Spectrum. The others are "MID" spectrums or in between.
IF you use the MID-range bulbs (4100) then also use the 6500 and 2700s.
In outdoors, the sun produces different rays in the spring (VEG Rays called Blue) and late summer for Bloom spectrum, the RED spectrum.
Color rating - Measured in Kelvin (K). The higher the number, the more bluish the light. 4000K-7000K is mostly on the blue side of the spectrum for Vegging or GROWING, while 3000K and under goes from a white spectrum, to a redder spectrum and is best for BLOOMING or FLOWERING.
This pic shows both COOL WHITE and WARM WHITE, or high and low kevin bulbs:
"General concensus seems to be blue spectrum for vegging and red spectrum for flowering." - Are you sure that one is right ?
Absolutely Right!
As far as I know, red spectrum is for vegging (miming summer sunlight) and blue spectrum for flowering (miming autumn light). If I'm mistaking I'll just have to apologize. But I remember I red one "how to" topic here somewhere and it said the same thing (red - vegging | blue - flowering).
WARM WHITE (pale) and COOL WHITE (bright white) is one way to determine the difference.Ok, sorry for insistance, but I'm starting to get worried. The cfl I bought has some sort of warm light (orange-white if you know what I mean). Is this the spectrum for vegetative stage ? Because if it's not, then I'm having a problem and it means I just started flowering on my 7 days old plant . Orange-white light is red spectrum or blue spectrum ? I just red that the color of the bulb has nothing to do with the spectrum color. This would mean that my orange-white bulb is not on red, but on blue spectrum, and that would be ok for vegetative stage, as you said. I'm asking all these things becuase the idiot manufacturer didn't mention the Kelvin value on the envelope. Sorry again for being persistent, but I really am a little scared ... Thanks for help.
WARM WHITE (pale) and COOL WHITE (bright white) is one way to determine the difference.
WARM White is the Low Kevin, Red Spectrum, Flowering
Cool White is the High Kevin, Blue Spectrum, VEGGING
Both cycles, VEG and BLOOM, need the DUAL Spectrum, or BOTH Spectrums. All new growers should know this before they start a grow.
so wot till happen if i use the 250w blue envirolite ive bought for vegging and after a month or so buy a red 250w bulb and swap them over for flowering ??
i thought that was the way to do it, didnt know you need both spectrums on during process
i only plan on growing 3 plants so 250w should good for them plants shudn't it, thats 83 watts per plant or even if i just grow 2 thats 125 a plantusing the wrong spectrum now will just be less efficient. I've seen growers use ONE 27 watt CFL for one plant, durign both cycles. It lived and bloomed and budded, but it was a runt.