Supplemental brings to mind unplanned needs. That caused me to think about backup lights. If I depend upon 5-6 high-efficiency fixtures, and two could conceivably fail at the same time, buying a couple Chinese epi-unknown fixtures could be a good value. Not expected to use them for extended periods. Not depending upon them as primary light. Just something to get through a few days until the primary light is repaired.A third tree would be supplemental lighting. This is like the first step of a design your optimal grow room app.
Non-DIY tree considerations:Ok. So, it sounds like we've filed in the "decision tree" a little further. For someone like @Cpappa27, CMH would have been the appropriate branch.
Still like to hear what @couchlock thinks; if he sees other conditions that would lead to Chinese epi-unknown fixtures.
It will be interesting to hear the DIY branch unfold. In what cases less efficient Epistars are desirable. I can't contribute to that. But, I look forward to seeing the different views.
Spectrum means color or wavelength. You can't say it doesn't matter how much light, it only matters that it's purple. That is silly.when it comes to LEDs, lumens cant be part of the equation. Its all about the spectrum and what plants can use. When you open your grow room and your blinded by your 400 watt hps, its light that isn't absorbed and its wasted... I may have been mislead but theres dozens of side by side comparisons showing Lumen Output means nothing if the correct spectrum is there.
Nothing wrong with a cheap backup. Any of the modular systems have the bonus of being able to just have a couple of spares around though.Supplemental brings to mind unplanned needs. That caused me to think about backup lights. If I depend upon 5-6 high-efficiency fixtures, and two could conceivably fail at the same time, buying a couple Chinese epi-unknown fixtures could be a good value. Not expected to use them for extended periods. Not depending upon them as primary light. Just something to get through a few days until the primary light is repaired.
(Kind of a back-handed compliment. It's a good light if you don't intend to use it. Not really what I was trying to say. Just that there is that need to have backup lights. These would work.).
It will be interesting to see how others respond to your placement of efficient LED lower than CMH. That implies CMH should be the choice not merely as a stop-gap until they can afford efficient LED.Non-DIY tree considerations:
Cost Upfront least to greatest: CFLs, LED bulbs, MH , HPS, Florescent T8, T5HO, Epistar LED, Efficient LED.
Efficiency Best to worst: MH, HPS, Efficient LED, LED bulbs, Epistar/T5HO, T8, CFL.
I should have put a few notes in there, that list is based on the absolute highest efficiency version of that type of product. A run of the mill street light MH or HPS won't beat a LED. Also the sizes that meet that efficiency are limited.It will be interesting to see how others respond to your placement of efficient LED lower than CMH. That implies CMH should be the choice not merely as a stop-gap until they can afford efficient LED.
What cmh run 50% efficiency and around 10 years without a hiccup if designed properly?....great lights, but taken other factors into account along with bulb changes and added heat costs, that's the true cost comparisonI should have put a few notes in there, that list is based on the absolute highest efficiency version of that type of product. A run of the mill street light MH or HPS won't beat a LED. Also the sizes that meet that efficiency are limited.
To understand what light will do the job best what you should look at is two things.They are not saying that, only that measuring lumens, does not measure intensity of photons, only the intensity that the human eye can see at around 580nm. For that you need a photometic or radiometric look....
For instance blue spectrums tend to emit large lumen counts because of their wavelengths, but low to medium intensity....reds emit low lumen counts but can emit high intensity...whites are in the middle with high lumen counts because most are based on a blue diode to begin with but are balanced with red spectrums that improve intensity, but don't necessarily improve lumen count, but are still high overall because of the blue spectrums...
So lumens as a measure is essentially irrelevant. We all see people compare lumens counts, but similar fixtures would be the exception to measure against for lumens. But it still doesnt tell of a intensity measurement like joules/per watt which would take all spectrums into account not just what the human eye sees best, which do fall outside of human vision. Then it could and is taken a step further by measuring averaging the radiometric measurements of individual wavelenghts in a grouping or by each individual spectrum. Blues >aqua >green>yellow>red>ir>etc.
[lumens don't tell you this type of information as they become skewed the farther you move away from 580nm in either direction....]
It's not absolutely precise, close calls could get called the wrong way, but I don't see a measure that works better that is available for all the lighting options. Those charts make it clear if your lights are on target, the lumen count just helps judge intensity even if it is a less than ideal measure. Unfortunately ideal measures don't seem to be available on all lighting options.It is misleading as I explained, for example in the chlorophyll charts, the peak of C1 is around 450-480nm, and you could have a blue spectrum oriented light that puts out a lot of lumens in the blue range but is NOT indicative of the intensity. Or it could have a real nice % in the 66nm range say, and the lumen count would be LOW and intensity high for the C2 end.....
The Christmas spirits are out, thank God for the ignore button. No more fat stuff for me!The world just seems like a better place now that I can't see your ramblings,I can only imagine now how many curse words and insults are directed my way and toward anyone else that responds to you,lifes good again.
Just curious, are 300 watt 11 band LEDs still considered flouros? Or does that term more refer to the configuration, i.e. T5?5'x10' room 2400 watts of LED, 400 watt Fluoro (8 300 watt 11 band LEDs) and 1 400 watt 4'x2' 8 bulb T5
Have you seen the $40 DIY spectrometer from Public Labs? (<<link) I wonder if a combination of that and lux could be used to objectively compare light efficiency. For example, a "people's par value." All we'd need is a standardized calibration. They use a CFL to find the color spike peculiar to mercury. If we standardized lux of a common source, everyone could adjust their lux values. Seems like lux and the color spectrum it's spread across would be accurate. (I forget if the DIY spectrometer has a strength value that could be used. A way to get umoles.).Unfortunately ideal measures don't seem to be available on all lighting options.
There are visual ways to depict decision trees called mind maps. Would this be appropriate for a group exercise?Ok. So, it sounds like we've filed in the "decision tree" a little further. For someone like @Cpappa27, CMH would have been the appropriate branch.
Still like to hear what @couchlock thinks; if he sees other conditions that would lead to Chinese epi-unknown fixtures.
It will be interesting to hear the DIY branch unfold. In what cases less efficient Epistars are desirable. I can't contribute to that. But, I look forward to seeing the different views.
Maybe supporters of Chinese epi-unknown fixtures would like to. So far, the "decision tree" doesn't seem that complicated.There are visual ways to depict decision trees called mind maps. Would this be appropriate for a group exercise?