Help with my lighting please!!!

polyarcturus

Well-Known Member
no that i would say dont go induction but dont play around till you get some good green first hps or flouro is always the way to go for boons or newbs.
 

noobled

Active Member
no that i would say dont go induction but dont play around till you get some good green first hps or flouro is always the way to go for boons or newbs.
Yea my buddy Had his under the hps for veg and mh for flower and turned out great he is on his one hundred plant so I think I will go with that
 

polyarcturus

Well-Known Member
a;though reverse that lighting maybe use the MH during last few weeks of flower, but other than that HPS for flower MH for veg or hell even HPS all they way through. (you could do MH all the way thru but HPS will have a bigger yield in flower)
 

noobled

Active Member
a;though reverse that lighting maybe use the MH during last few weeks of flower, but other than that HPS for flower MH for veg or hell even HPS all they way through. (you could do MH all the way thru but HPS will have a bigger yield in flower)

got my Lights put the mh in for veg and change it out during flowering I also bought a high reflective tent
 
Induction lights are not much more than a fluorescent lamp, check the spectrum charts and you will see. They were originally designed, and still used, in factories and other areas where access to maintain the bulbs is very difficult, reason being that the induction lamp does not have a filament that wears out like a standard fluorscent or an arc tube that wears out like an HPS or MH bulb. But for home grows, you do not need a bulb that lasts 100,000 hours, nor do you need to pay $700 and up for an industrial light that isn't really even designed for a garden. You can use either MH or HPS all the way through your grows, but most will use an MH in veg growth and then switch to HPS in flower.
 

The Count

Well-Known Member
MH has more purple and blues for veg while HPS have more reds oranges n yellows for flower. Both have enough to work all the way through but we're shooting for best results so MH for veg HPS for flower
 

dabig

Member
Induction lights are not much more than a fluorescent lamp, check the spectrum charts and you will see. They were originally designed, and still used, in factories and other areas where access to maintain the bulbs is very difficult, reason being that the induction lamp does not have a filament that wears out like a standard fluorscent or an arc tube that wears out like an HPS or MH bulb. But for home grows, you do not need a bulb that lasts 100,000 hours, nor do you need to pay $700 and up for an industrial light that isn't really even designed for a garden. You can use either MH or HPS all the way through your grows, but most will use an MH in veg growth and then switch to HPS in flower.
I use HPS and Floros now as I have for over 10 years. If you have done so like me, you have spent thousands on new bulbs and probably thousands running cooling fans and AC. $700 up front does not seem like much if I don't have to replace the bulb for 10 years. The inda-gro induction lamps from what I can read and see appear to have a very healthy spectrum for plants from clone to flower. HPS works, but I am desperately trying to replace it with something cooler, more efficient and less stressful to the plants. Inda-gro appears to fit the bill, I will know when i order two of the PAR420's and a PAR200.
 
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