you need to understand the difference between radiant heat and ambient temperature. radiant heat passes through the air and directly heats an object - as an extreme radiant heat is what cooks an egg on the sidewalk on a hot day in the desert. the ambient temp of the air is in the 30c range but the egg is cooking at greater than 100c due to the radiant heat. and i guarantee you the air is still in the 30c range within a couple of inches of the egg.I would suggest a heat gun would do a far better job than a thermometer.
But you're saying...that lower til your hand doesn't become uncomfortable. Well at what temp does your hand get uncomfortable--at 60 C. So how does the temp drop from 60C to 24C within a foot?
Im sure a cooled hood helps and so does fans and AC....but I find it impossible to believe that the plants at canopy-level is a comfortable 24 C with a HID (I know you have recitied commonly accepted guidelines---and im not calling you a liar or anything...and I also know that success has come from that formula). So im playing a bit of Devil's advocate here.
but 24C at canopy level with a HID light (even at 2 feet away)---Im sorry Im having trouble understanding the real temperature for a HID at the canopy level
10"...is that not way too far away? Why so far?i keep my t5's 10" from canopy,i have the 2' 8 bulb sunblaze,in a 2 1/2x2 1/2 closet,temp stays at around 74f to 80f,at high noon.
I keep mine at 1-2 inches--and im saying too myself--why not even closer? I could lick my T5s at operating temperature.If you are using T-5s you can have them a few inches above the plant, I've seen some people do 2-3 inches. T5s spread the heat they generate over a wider surface than regular HID lights. Because the heat is distributed evenly, you can put the light closer. I keep my t5s extremely close to the canopy, and have never gotten burnt. However, I do use 2 small clip fans to blow air across the light/canopy, so perhaps this plays a part.
View attachment 912094
air does absorb radiant heat energy from the sun but air is a relatively transparent medium to infrared radiation, so it's absorbing a small fraction of the total energy. the earth absorbs most of the energy but is so large it acts as a heat sink and doesn't increase in temp much. the same principals apply in a grow room except you achieve the effect by sending relatively cool air over the plants taking away much of the radiant heat they absorbed. sorry, chem engineer geek running free hereAre we saying that radiant heat has no effect on the temperature of the surrounding air? Because isn't that all amibent temp is air temp--is it not?
i like to try and have atleast an inch of node spaceing,and it helps with not haveing to move the light so much..10"...is that not way too far away? Why so far?