G0DFATHER1
Member
Ok. so this is my first post. ive been doing non stop research for the past 2 months about everything having to do with growing. everything from the lighting to the microorganisms in the dirt to the metabolism of plants. this is my first post so i want your opinions after i explain what i think about mirrors.
so first off i looked up things about light and how it reflects of surfaces. most people know about specular and diffuse reflection. white paint has a diffuse reflection while mylar and mirrors have specular reflection. this is due to the metal in the mylar and the mirror.
Everything i have found online about mirrors and growing is that everyone says they dont work cause it absorbs light. this is true in a sense. most mirrors are made of silver with a little tin mixed in to make it adhere to the glass. well guess what!!! silver reflects most of the visible spectrum BUT DOES NOT REFLECT MUCH OF THE BLUE SPECTRUM IN WHICH PLANTS USE
Check out this link. it is a graph of different metals and what they reflect
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/9d/Image-Metal-reflectance.png/350px-Image-Metal-reflectance.png
as you can see silver lacks the 200-400 nm which is all the blue and UVA that the plant needs. this makes mirrors unsuitable for growing, but more so in vegetative growth. it would work great for flowering as it reflects the orange and red as good as aluminum
which brings me to my next point. a lot of people do not know what mylar is made of. if you look into it you will find mylar is simply DuPont's name for its plastic that is attached to a vapor deposited layer of ALUMINIUM. which gives it a extreme polished surface which reflects light more specularly.
the fact is that aluminium itself reflects 98-99% of all visible light regardless of how polished it is. it also reflects infrared (heat) energy. this reflection of IR is what causes "hot spots" these are actually not caused by 1 flat reflection like a mirror but more by many tiny reflections of creased foil or mylar concentrating a large amount of IR into one spot.
I think (this is only a hypothesis) 2 things. 1) lining all your walls in pure aluminium based mirrors would be just as effective as properly stretched and mounted mylar and would actually be easier to work with. 2) mirrors would not create hot spots unless they are extremely close to the bulb and plant. simply put hotspots dont happen if ur plant is far enough away from the light source.
here is my next idea for a perfect reflector for hoticultural use. take aluminum tape and tape a wall up so that it is completely covered in a layer of reflective aluminum tape. then take flat/matte white paint and cover this layer of tape in a thin layer of this paint. the surface of white paint will make all light hitting it become diffused and all light that passes through the thin layer of paint gets reflected back at the paint by the layer of aluminium and continues to get difussed. Tell me what you think
so first off i looked up things about light and how it reflects of surfaces. most people know about specular and diffuse reflection. white paint has a diffuse reflection while mylar and mirrors have specular reflection. this is due to the metal in the mylar and the mirror.
Everything i have found online about mirrors and growing is that everyone says they dont work cause it absorbs light. this is true in a sense. most mirrors are made of silver with a little tin mixed in to make it adhere to the glass. well guess what!!! silver reflects most of the visible spectrum BUT DOES NOT REFLECT MUCH OF THE BLUE SPECTRUM IN WHICH PLANTS USE
Check out this link. it is a graph of different metals and what they reflect
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/9d/Image-Metal-reflectance.png/350px-Image-Metal-reflectance.png
as you can see silver lacks the 200-400 nm which is all the blue and UVA that the plant needs. this makes mirrors unsuitable for growing, but more so in vegetative growth. it would work great for flowering as it reflects the orange and red as good as aluminum
which brings me to my next point. a lot of people do not know what mylar is made of. if you look into it you will find mylar is simply DuPont's name for its plastic that is attached to a vapor deposited layer of ALUMINIUM. which gives it a extreme polished surface which reflects light more specularly.
the fact is that aluminium itself reflects 98-99% of all visible light regardless of how polished it is. it also reflects infrared (heat) energy. this reflection of IR is what causes "hot spots" these are actually not caused by 1 flat reflection like a mirror but more by many tiny reflections of creased foil or mylar concentrating a large amount of IR into one spot.
I think (this is only a hypothesis) 2 things. 1) lining all your walls in pure aluminium based mirrors would be just as effective as properly stretched and mounted mylar and would actually be easier to work with. 2) mirrors would not create hot spots unless they are extremely close to the bulb and plant. simply put hotspots dont happen if ur plant is far enough away from the light source.
here is my next idea for a perfect reflector for hoticultural use. take aluminum tape and tape a wall up so that it is completely covered in a layer of reflective aluminum tape. then take flat/matte white paint and cover this layer of tape in a thin layer of this paint. the surface of white paint will make all light hitting it become diffused and all light that passes through the thin layer of paint gets reflected back at the paint by the layer of aluminium and continues to get difussed. Tell me what you think