Brick Top
New Member
Of the entire light spectrum only 44% is visible light. Plants only use visible light and of that they mainly only use two fairly narrow ranges of it. So precisely what good is it for watts to be burned to create spectrum ranges that plants do not use or hardly use?So how is an HPS better? I mean that chart compares CMH and HPS and the CMH looks a lot better to me especially since I already know an HPS is not needed in anyway, a MH with more colors sounds to be just the bees knees.
Chlorophyll does not absorb all wavelenghts of visible light equally. Chlorophyll a, the most important light-absorbing pigment in plants, does not absorb light in the green part of the spectrum, so the green from a CMH is useless because light in the green wavelength is reflected.
Light absorption by chlorophyll a is at a maximum at two points, between 430 and 662nm, and, those are two 'peaks.' There is not near equal amounts of light absorption of the wavelength between them. So that's another part of the CMH light spectrum that is basically wasted wattage being burned to create something plants use extremely little of. And on either side of the two peaks the light adsorption rate again greatly diminishes because, again, it is not in a range chlorophyll a absorbs.
Since that is the case, please clarify why; "more colors sounds to be just the bees knees" to you.
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