alright thanks. another question is. say i get 2 40w 2700k cfl's. and have that as the main 2 bulbs in my y splitter above the plants. i also have 2 other lights comin down from the side. which bulbs should i use in there, the 2 26 w soft whites 1700k. or 2 26 daylights. or 1 of each?deff hurt yeild ,if u could get like 4 of those lights it would be fine and make a decent yeild
use all the light you can u will have a good plant and good yeild with those light salright thanks. another question is. say i get 2 40w 2700k cfl's. and have that as the main 2 bulbs in my y splitter above the plants. i also have 2 other lights comin down from the side. which bulbs should i use in there, the 2 26 w soft whites 1700k. or 2 26 daylights. or 1 of each?
Volume of incorrect light spectrum will not help...deff hurt yeild ,if u could get like 4 of those lights it would be fine and make a decent yeild
dont include me in your 'everyone'.everyone on here is wrong so far the 1700k is 1700 kelvin which actually is color temp
dont include me in your 'everyone'.
Color temperature is a characteristic of visible light that has important applications in lighting, photography, videography, publishing, and other fields. The color temperature of a light source is determined by comparing its chromaticity with that of an ideal black-body radiator. The temperature (usually measured in kelvins (K)) at which the heated black-body radiator matches the color of the light source is that source's color temperature; for a black body source, it is directly related to Planck's law and Wien's displacement law.
Higher color temperatures (5000 K or more) are "cool" (greenblue) colors, and lower color temperatures (27003000 K) "warm" (yellowred) colors
Thanks for all the help everyone. i realize now that on packages i was seeing 1700 lumens and was thinking that wasnt the right color spectrum. now i reliaze that it doesnt mean its color temperature 1700. its 2700. so i have 4 26 w soft whites now. should be more then enough light for my space. thanks for all the help
No probs!my bad except for you you had it i just wasn't paying attention
Just for your info: 2700k=warm=flowering 6500k=cool=vegyou should get more when you can. how big is your plant? and you'll want 6300 or whatever they make for flowering you'll want as many as you can the more the better for you, your plants, and your yield
but sounds good so far lets see some pix
not at all blue spectrum is bomb for any vegVolume of incorrect light spectrum will not help...
Just for your info: 2700k=warm=flowering 6500k=cool=veg
yes it will like a mixture. Hope your grow goes well.i have a mix of both 2700 and 6500 for my plant it's growing quite nicely
yes it will like a mixture. Hope your grow goes well.