Mackaveli420
Well-Known Member
Whats more reflective? Regular old tin foil or regular old flat white paint?
Sorry thats absolutely wrong, foil has the worst reflective properties, about 50-60%, no where near anything else, especially white paintthe foil is much, much more reflective than white paint...which is why it creates hot spots and burns your plants.
if you must use foil, I've heard the dull side facing your plants is better than the shiny side.
the foil is much, much more reflective than white paint...which is why it creates hot spots and burns your plants.
if you must use foil, I've heard the dull side facing your plants is better than the shiny side.
But heat is light. Plants use *some* UV and IR, afaik! Aluminum does this far better than paint, as you state.Yep completely wrong. Foil is 50% reflective. The problem with hotspots isn't that it reflects too much light it's that it reflects heat better than it does light.
that was the original question. my answer, 'the foil is much, much more reflective than white paint...which is why it creates hot spots and burns your plants.Whats more reflective? Regular old tin foil or regular old flat white paint?
a white surface reflects wave energy and diffuses it(if the surface is rough, like matte paint, while a black surface absorbs light(radiation actually) and converts its energy to heat, thereby radiating heat. a shiny metal, especially a 'silvered' one, reflects much more light than a white surface, but also most of the heat, the surface is smooth. which is why a dulled or burnished(not smooth) silvery metal is way better than a white surface...for reflection...that is why hoods/reflectors, for plant lights, are a dull silvery metal, whatever it's material, not white, and they're sold for redirecting light, only...and for no other purpose. and that is why, when you shop online for a hood, it ain't white inside. or go to the garden store, you will not find paint to be used as a bulb reflector.(however, some shops may sell it to paint a dark surface near your grow, so the dark surface won't absorb the light and produce heat)Yep completely wrong. Foil is 50% reflective. The problem with hotspots isn't that it reflects too much light it's that it reflects heat better than it does light.
There is a reason it's only made for cooking and you don't normally see aluminum foil on the shelves for any purpose other than just cooking.
A really good flat white paint is hard to beat. Even mylar that is brand new but not pulled perfectly flat is not as efficient as flat white paint. Dirty mylar is way less effective. And so on.
Behr Ultra Pure White FLAT wall paint is a really good one, or match that with a cheaper brand.
But heat is light. Plants use *some* UV and IR, afaik! Aluminum does this far better than paint, as you state.
Shiny aluminum foil is between 85-95% reflective(the dull side is ~80%, Wikipedia). Flat white paint is basically the same reflectivity as the dull side(if you get the right paint, and can paint it properly, a skill in itself). Ideally you glue foil to cardboard, or another flat surface. Don't even try fancy shapes(curves,cones). Keep it wide and flat, shiny-side out. You could probably buff the foil surface for better results.
The conventional 'wisdom': "It's a bad reflector.. so use the less reflective side! No, no, no don't use it at all!"
The truth: it's a highly efficient reflector just shy of mylar, and better at reflection than generic white paint. Maybe a reflective paint would be better. The problem is people don't use foil correctly, and it's somewhat difficult to handle.
You really want a back reflector. You can increase directed usable light by 30-40%! Metal/specialty paint seems to be the best choice.
However coating distance surfaces will not help much. At greater distances it just matters less. White paint is great for distances greater than a few inches. Plus it's easier(maybe).
I had one box with aluminum foil just on the top(glued on) reflecting back(1" away or so from light), and another identical box/lights with just white paint. The aluminum foil seemed to promote a more powerful and more balanced light spread and even temperature. I don't know what these 'hot spots' are.... I've only used floros.
EDIT: White enamel paint has 80-85%*. White *POWDER* coat is where you can hit 90%*. Your bucket of white paint is probably well under 85%. Wikipedia lists shiny aluminum foil at 88%.
Also, the shape of the reflector matters more than the material(given aluminum, mylar, or white paint)*!
But sheet aluminum would be a much better idea, it's insanely cheap, mirror-finished, and rigid enough to move around a bit, doesn't crinkle. Sheet aluminum has been used in the lighting industry for decades*.
*Source: Applied Illumination Engineering By Jack L. Lindsey
http://books.google.com/books?id=0d7u9Nr33zIC&pg=PA483&lpg=PA483&dq=aluminum+reflector++comparison&source=web&ots=WyLgL914LS&sig=P35u62EonubVtf7JTA444k0nDeo&hl=en&ei=G9-RSeX0EYmMsAPdk4StCw&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=3&ct=result
anodized only protects the metal from corrosion, has nothing to do with reflectivity. but you're correct, which was the point I was making, a textured or not shiny aluminum is far superior to a textured white. however, the shiny aluminum is not better than 'glossy white', which ain't to 'hot', lol, either. my hoods are dimples and 'scratched' all over, they've been burnished, the shine has been removed, and more. I'll get a pic up, but the lights are on now and all you'll see is 'white' light. a powder coat is good...if it's white, it reflects light, but it's main purpose, as being textured, is to diffuse light. it doesn't reflect heat, good.So why are most high-end reflectors/commercial grow reflectors dimpled anodized aluminum with ~95% reflectivity? And the rest(90%?) are just plane aluminum, sometimes powder coated. The reflectively fairs 85-95% from 200-1000nm except a dip around 800 or so down to 85%. Just look at it! http://www.answers.com/topic/reflectivity
Any thoughts on ideal lux? As for heat, try a fan. In a small grow the reflective efficiency of aluminum (sheet or foil) could be pretty beneficial over alternatives. If you got crafty you could bend some thicker sheets into your own fixtures/reflectors. If you really get excited about it, powder coat!
http://www.4hydroponics.com/lighting/reflectorsSS.asp
"textured aluminum" aka "crinkled up and re-flattened aluminum foil" hmmmm
Here's an interesting article: http://www.usu.edu/cpl/research_spectral10.htm
Final one: http://ioannis.virtualcomposer2000.com/spectroscope/elements.html <-pretty good, but lengthy