i think his lights are fine. but as far as you go. a 400 only penetrates so far. so u may have donkey dick colas.. but u got hella popcorn too and ur buds are long. not fat. ive tried under my 400 with light intensity . shorter plants dont get as much popcorn n taller ones stretch to the cola starting point. light from a 400 just doesnt penetrate enough to be 25'' away. its enough. but it doesnt compare to 10-18 inches.Hey Shrubs
thought I'd help ya out with those PM's LOL
Lights are 400 watt CMH's and as you can see they are 25 inches above the canopy. You can also see that damn my buds are too big as well in the 6th week of flower with 12 and 14 inch colas
You folks can either buy into the forum retoric and crap or you could simply give the plants what they need and watch them thrive. Seriously how can you look at the spectacular plants that Shrubs is growing in the single most professional grow on this forum and question his methods ??? Instead of trying to give advice you should be watching and learning, it don't get any better here at RIU and I have had the privledge of tasting his buds and they taste as good as they look people. Learn how to properly dial in ALL of your garden elements and your plants will reward you too
might be true with an HPS (never had one) but certainly not true with CMH at 10 inches plants burn, the lights are 5 feet off the concrete basement floor and they heat it just like the sun on a sidewalki think his lights are fine. but as far as you go. a 400 only penetrates so far. so u may have donkey dick colas.. but u got hella popcorn too and ur buds are long. not fat. ive tried under my 400 with light intensity . shorter plants dont get as much popcorn n taller ones stretch to the cola starting point. light from a 400 just doesnt penetrate enough to be 25'' away. its enough. but it doesnt compare to 10-18 inches.
intesnsity n penetration do matter. id rather have full solid buds on bottom thru top. then hae light airy crap below n super long(not phat) colas.
nope run cooler than hps, you can actually hold a 250 while it's on, but they have UVB and same spectrum as the sunoh ok, i use hps in a cooltube so i dont hae that prob.. cmh bulbs run hot?
not a theory, I've burnt em, had some sativas that grew to close. It's mostly the UVB but spectrum does equal photon energy and the PAR on CMH bulbs is one of the best there ismy 600 is in the cooltube my 400 isn't. asnd i keep it at 12" if ur bulb runs cooler than ur theory of burnin is bust. spectrums do not equal heat. i bet if u put yourlight a lil closer u wil see a difference. u think.. n sorry too shrubs my man.
that is the reason most growers don't use em, only go as high as 400 and only work on magnetic ballastcool, does cmh pnly come in 400? i want new bulbs
Awesome. I read that if your getting 7500 foot candles at canopy top that that is an excellent amount of light for flowering. Does that sound right to you shrubs? I got this badass meter and love taking measurements...been meaning to map the hot spots in my room for sometime now and tweak for next cycle..Yes the photon flux. If too many photons clip thw surface of the leaf it will cause photo-cell receptor inhibition.
This results in stress unrelated to radiant heat stress.
In nature plants never receive more than 10k footcandles. Thats the maximum received from the sun at it's peak.
Considering the short amount of time the sun is peaked, as well as other factors; other plants shading, dust on the leaf
surface, clouds etc. One can assume the plants are rarely receiving that much light.
Stubbs where did you get this info on "photocell receptor inhibition"? I searched around a bit and all I could find on it was stuff you wrote. I've seen radiant heat stress from the bulbs being to close cause bleaching but what is the point of "photocell receptor inhibition"? I grow using vertical lighting and the main thing I deal with is light vs plant placement to keep leaves from burning. Like you I've found that 1000w lights work better a little further away but the tolerance seems pretty close, literally 6 inches seems to be the difference between burn and a happy plant.Yes the photon flux. If too many photons clip thw surface of the leaf it will cause photo-cell receptor inhibition.
This results in stress unrelated to radiant heat stress.
In nature plants never receive more than 10k footcandles. Thats the maximum received from the sun at it's peak.
Considering the short amount of time the sun is peaked, as well as other factors; other plants shading, dust on the leaf
surface, clouds etc. One can assume the plants are rarely receiving that much light.
Here is a bit more: https://www.rollitup.org/advanced-marijuana-cultivation/314052-plant-light-receptors.htmlNice. Yea, I hadn't actually read up on it in a long time. Photoinhibition. See I have read that photosynthesis will stop in many terrestrial plants when Sunlight levels on the leaf surface reach 6500 foot candles. That doesn't mean the same thing happens for HPS lights becase they are different spectrums giving a different Photon flux. But like the information says the different factors such as temp, humidity, CO2 and salinity all effect the photosystems indepedently. It really is up to each individual to find what spacing works best in their environment. But it is improbable that one can look at a picture and say "your light are too far" unless there are ridiculously airy buds coming out. Anyways, thanks for keeping this place informative.
I agree, to me great canopy management and your light spacing seems to work well if you are getting 1.25lbs per light. Obviously the numbers would not add up if in fact your lights were too far. Have you also heard about reflectors crossing wavelengths of light? When the plants get strong reflected light as wells as direct light from the bulbs it confuses them. The effect is funky phototropism making leaves and stems turn in lots of different directions. This was the point of "German aluminum" in reflectors it diffused the light better to prevent crossed wavelengths.Nice. Yea, I hadn't actually read up on it in a long time. Photoinhibition. See I have read that photosynthesis will stop in many terrestrial plants when Sunlight levels on the leaf surface reach 6500 foot candles. That doesn't mean the same thing happens for HPS lights becase they are different spectrums giving a different Photon flux. But like the information says the different factors such as temp, humidity, CO2 and salinity all effect the photosystems indepedently. It really is up to each individual to find what spacing works best in their environment. But it is improbable that one can look at a picture and say "your light are too far" unless there are ridiculously airy buds coming out. Anyways, thanks for keeping this place informative.