ScarletteSky
Well-Known Member
bump 4 votes
In boating terms if you have a boat with a 40hp motor and add another 40hp motor you don't go twice as fast you can haul a heavyer load and can get it up to speed faster.In other terms you can add more plants, or grow them bigger with more hp or bulbs. peace man
The lumen is the photometric unit of light output. Although most consumers still think of light in terms of power consumed by the bulb, in the U.S. it has been a trade requirement for several decades that light bulb packaging give the output in lumens. The package of a 60 watt incandescent bulb indicates that it provides about 900 lumens, as does the package of the 15 watt compact fluorescent.
The lumen is defined as amount of light given into one steradian by a point source of one candela strength; while the candela, a base SI unit, is defined as the luminous intensity of a source of monochromatic radiation, of frequency 540 terahertz, and a radiant intensity of 1/683 watts per steradian. (540 THz corresponds to about 555 nanometres, the wavelength, in the green, to which the human eye is most sensitive. The number 1/683 was chosen to make the candela about equal to the standard candle, the unit which it superseded).
Combining these definitions, we see that 1/683 watt of 555 nanometre green light provides one lumen. [Thus, the lumen scale is calibrated to a point in the spectrum that photosynthesis doesn't use -- Mac]
The relation between watts and lumens is not just a simple scaling factor. We know this already, because the 60 watt incandescent bulb and the 15 watt compact fluorescent can both provide 900 lumens.
The definition tells us that 1 watt of pure green 555 nm light is "worth" 683 lumens. It does not say anything about other wavelengths. Because lumens are photometric units, their relationship to watts depends on the wavelength according to how visible the wavelength is. Infrared and ultraviolet radiation, for example, are invisible and do not count. One watt of infrared radiation (which is where most of the radiation from an incandescent bulb falls) is worth zero lumens. Within the visible spectrum, wavelengths of light are weighted according to a function called the "photopic spectral luminous efficiency." According to this function, 700 nm red light is only about 4% as efficient as 555 nm green light. Thus, one watt of 700 nm red light is "worth" only 27 lumens. [This suggests to me that lumen ratings would be misleading for comparing, say, HPS to CMH. CMH is much greener light, and will appear to be 'worth' more lumens, even though it should be less useful to flowering Cannabis.-Mac]
Because of the summation over the visual portion of the EM spectrum that is part of this weighting, the unit of "lumen" is color-blind: there is no way to tell what color a lumen will appear. This is equivalent to evaluating groceries by number of bags: there is no information about the specific content, just a number that refers to the total weighted quantity.
That's OK--so are they. Yes, more lights means more light. But not necessarily any more intense light. The growth of Cannabis is affected by both the amount of PAR energy available, and it's intensity. Conventional wisdom says the amount of light is important to general plant growth and vigor and its intensity to flowering yield/potency, but I'd imagine that such a rule of thumb is far too generalized.i am confused as to what people are triying to explain or argue
I absolutely agree with this statement. No one on this entire board has stated just what the minimum intensity or max intensity is. Apparently because people do get buds (albeit less dense than hps but no lack in potency) the CFL intensity seems at least adequate.That's OK--so are they. Yes, more lights means more light. But not necessarily any more intense light. The growth of Cannabis is affected by both the amount of PAR energy available, and it's intensity. Conventional wisdom says the amount of light is important to general plant growth and vigor and its intensity to flowering yield/potency, but I'd imagine that such a rule of thumb is far too generalized.
Really I think you nailed it. Adding more CFLs will increase coverage. But they do not add up to be a more intense, penetrating light. I witness this with entertainment fixtures all the time. Say five 1000w lights in the same focus will give more coverage but are not as intense as one 5000w lamp. Often times I am more concerned about Color Temperature but intensity makes a huge affect on this as well when dealing with incandescent fixtures. There is a huge difference just in bulb types as far is what is considered "usable" light and lumen output per watt.That's OK--so are they. Yes, more lights means more light. But not necessarily any more intense light. The growth of Cannabis is affected by both the amount of PAR energy available, and it's intensity. Conventional wisdom says the amount of light is important to general plant growth and vigor and its intensity to flowering yield/potency, but I'd imagine that such a rule of thumb is far too generalized.