Either would serve you well, but if you can afford it, get the 320. An extra board means better light-spread, even if you don't turn it all the way up.New to growing. Have 4 plants about 4 weeks along in a 2x4x5 tent. Need help to decide between the HLG QB 260 kit and the 320 kit. Is the 260 enough to flower that tent well or should I step up and get the 320?
Thanks!
Thats great thanks!Either would serve you well, but if you can afford it, get the 320. An extra board means better light-spread, even if you don't turn it all the way up.
I'd suggest starting lower and then dialing it up if the plants can take it.Thats great thanks!
As a rule would I want to dial the 320 back a bit in that size tent? Maybe run fully open at first but as the plants grow closer to the light then dial it back?
But even at a power well under its max - say 30w/sq ft - with 864 diodes, running more efficiently than your average fixture, due to being run further below the diodes' limit, the 320 will kick ass in that space.With only 5 feet height you may wanna look into strips or the qb120/132 or whatever the ones that spread the diodes more and doent need heatsink. With 5 feet of height you will probably never be able to use the full 320w as it will bleach plants near to it. Get a taller tent or get something that spreads the light out. Qb320 + hanginghheight and aprox 1 foot of height of your pots (just guessing) will eat up about 3 foot of height leavingbyou only 2 foot for the plants to grow.
Diode count and wattage is on point, but i i thjnk OP would be better served going the same route as you: qb120 covering the whole ceiling of the tent. Its probably cheaper aswell.But even at a power well under its max - say 30w/sq ft - with 864 diodes, running more efficiently than your average fixture, due to being run further below the diodes' limit, the 320 will kick ass in that space.
But a strip build would be cheaper, and would also kick ass in that space.
Yeah, that would be a great option, provided he can keep the boards cool. My only concern would be that in a 2' wide space, the 120s would have to be placed right next to each other, so there wouldn't be airflow between the boards. But a couple of small, well-placed fans above the fixture could probably take care of that.Diode count and wattage is on point, but i i thjnk OP would be better served going the same route as you: qb120 covering the whole ceiling of the tent. Its probably cheaper aswell.
The 320 wouldn't roast his plants at the appropriate power, but you do make a good point about the efficiency of the driver. It would be worth knowing how that trade-off turned out, overall fixture-efficiency-wise.Also, somebody correct me of im wrong but i believe you will gain efficiency at the board by dimming but youre going to lose efficiency at the driver. The difference after the trade off is probably negligible. Yoire just going to pay 150$ more for the 320 and youre going to dim it to a 260. get the 260 save the cash and get a solid HLG low watt light for vegging ORRR even a taller tent.
If you think you will upgrade the tent height then the 320 is the way to go imo. Better spread than a 260 kit and you can of course run it softer for now.Thanks for all the info guys!
I think I am going to go with the 260xl. Just seems like the easiest solution for a new grower like me!
I definitely think a bigger tent is in my future tho.
I would recommend the 132s over the 120s, for the extra juice (75w per board rather than 60w). My concern with that configuration would be the same as yours with the 320 in your 2.5' wide tent - getting sufficient light to the edges of the canopy. But it would still be a solid option.I have a 320 kit and 4 4ft brisgelux strips in mine. My tent is 2.5x4x5 with the extra half foot I didn’t like the coverage of just the 320 by itself. I would probably go with 4 120 or 132 qbs if I was you.
Ya I’d go 132s.I would recommend the 132s over the 120s, for the extra juice (75w per board rather than 60w). My concern with that configuration would be the same as yours with the 320 in your 2.5' wide tent - getting sufficient light to the edges of the canopy. But it would still be a solid option.