Ah, sorry. I have noticed they are quite hard to notice. I will try to use the pictures, I just don't know a nice way to put them into the posts. I usually like inline, but idk.
You can copy and paste images into the body of a reply but using a link is a "better" way to do things. I've been a software engineer for 30+ years (I got
out of web programming in 1987 because it was such a horrible hack) so I 100% understand it. The issue is that my mental image was of the photos and, when, at first, I didn't see them in the thread I was confused.
Using links saves bandwidth (so pages load faster) and disk space for the site (so the server hamsters don't have to work as hard).
Ah ya, sorry. It definitely helps if I give more info, forget people can't read my thoughts.
Nicely said.
As far as budget, I am not sure, probably anything under like $1500 USD. I don't have a problem putting things on credit and paying it off over the course of a no-interest period.
That's a good chunk of change and you will be able to get a good 5' light for <$1k.
For the grow tent I am using an AC Infinity CloudLab 866 Grow Tent. Its 60in * 60in * 80in. I realize now that those lights are dismally inappropriate for my intended uses. I thought I could just use all 6 lights at once and get 181*6=1086 umol, which I read is a little over what you want. Didn't realize it didn't work that way lol.
Understood.
For the eight zillionth time, I'll recommend that a grower gets a light meter. In 2021, I tested Photone and it failed. Since then I've tested it again and it was only 16% off but I would not use the app and I recommend it only under certain circumstances. Given that you've "got budget", I'd suggest you send Amazon $32 for a Uni-T light meter. I"ve attached a document I wrote that will help you convert the lux reading from the Uni-T to µmol which is how PPFD is measured. Another option is a PAR meter, the cheapest of which I'd recommend is $400±. I see that as a very low priority for most growers because,
in practical terms, a lux meter is as accurate as a PAR meter.
There's a lot of value for you in getting a light meter because 5' x 5' is a pretty good sized area and, even with the best light, you're going to have some light falloff as you move from the center of the light toward the edges and into the corners. A light meter will help you understand how much light your plants are getting and it will help you figure out how to train your plants to get the most light.
I'm more than happy to share my thoughts on that and post info about how I use a meter to optimize light levels.
What is a fill light? Is that just adding supplemental light to hit various parts of the spectrum?
"fill light" - a photography term but I use it to imply a small light that's used to provide light in a specific or isolated location.
Even in my little 2' x 4' tent, I've had plants from the same seed packet turn out to be 50" tall while others are 24" tall. The only way to light that grow was to get the Vipar XS-1500 (this was before the Pro model came out) and use it on the little plants. I've also had plants that were so big that they couldn't fit in the 2' x 4' so I allowed the "front row" of branches to lean out of the tent and I hung the Vipar (or another light) to provide light to the branches that weren't able to get light from the light in the tent.
I already have the grow tent so I am going to work with that. I would prefer to fill the tent. I don't mind doing a long vege period to get the plants large (if that's a thing) because I am in California and am limited to how many plants I can have.
I'm in CA as well, north Orange County. And you?
Aside - I just learned that my use of the word "highway" is a tell. Also, in California, Interstate 5, for example is referred to as "the 5".
Wow, they can grow that fast? Is my slower growth a consequence of the poor light? aha D:
All other things being and assuming that light levels are at or below the light saturation point, a grow that gets more light will provide a larger crop and one with higher quality (flower to above ground mass). I try to get my plants as much light as possible and look to get my photos to >1100µmol.
I have a scrog net, I think that's what it is called. I am currently growing 5 different strains, 6 plants total. As long as I am not looking for optimal growth right now, is it going to be fine to use just one large light? I think eventually I will get some small grow tents and having a mother of each strain I enjoy.
I do like the idea of having multiple lights to rotate out though. That does sound nice.
My hunch is that the expression "crawl, walk, run" is new to you.
That may well work out but, without knowing, at the very least, the basics, it can "end badly". I'm all shooting for excellence but a new grower in a large tent with multiple strains is "a lot of moving parts". There are quite a few people here on RIU with signficant expertise so you've come to the right place.
Re. wattage - conventional wisdom is 30-40 watts input wattage per square foot of grow space. You can never have too much light (available). I'm retiring my Growcraft X3 330 watt flower light, 40+ watts/square foot, and replacing it with a Vipar G4500 which is 430 watts (54±). I'm doing that for very specific reasons but, since you're looking to spend a good chunk of change on a light for your 5', there's an argument to me made to move to the 800-1000 watt category.