Help me plan this!

cooper420

Member
Whatuppp
Alright im high so i can't find my tape measure
I haveabout a 10ft long like 2 maybe 2 1/2 deep and 8ft tall closet
Looking to grow as much as i can and keep it stealth
What would y'all say for howmany light/plant ratio and all i can have
need help this will be first grow!:joint:
 

Devildog93

Well-Known Member
3 400w switchables and 12 pants staggarded like this ,',',',',',' or 6 with the srcog technique.

I see promise in this combined with the suggestion of cool tubes previous. Would be a sweet honey pot IMO. Never tried the scrog technique myself.

Good luck OP.
 

cooper420

Member
Idk what the scrog technique is i was think the six and six offset
and im doing soil

Would two 400s work? Lookin to use one light is that possible? If so what
 

Devildog93

Well-Known Member
Idk what the scrog technique is i was think the six and six offset
and im doing soil

Would two 400s work? Lookin to use one light is that possible? If so what
If only one light in that "long" of a room........I would suggest a 1000 W (maybe on a track to expand light coverage). Two 400 W would be awesome though. Myself.....I'd go with 2 1000W in a room like that. Heat buildup should be on your top of limiting factors list.

Some will say overkill....I say not when it comes to trying to simulate sunlight.

Scrog...... basically training horizontal growth to encourage side shoots......fewer plants same area filled. You can also top (prune) the plants to encourage the growth of multiple tops, I myself am not a fan of that. I prefer the "sea of green" staggered main colas running in rockwool flood/drain tables. Old school but I have a good system worked out.
I suggest looking in these forums for more info on scrog technique.
 

Devildog93

Well-Known Member
Thanks devil,
Exhaust help!! Anyone
Two things to consider when it comes to exhaust venting a room. Generally, the biggest issue is ridding the room of excess heat. The second factor is recharging CO2 depleted air.
Air we breathe runs about 300-350 ppm. That can be used up fairly quickly, especially as bud growth increases the nutrient uptake rate of the plants.

With previous setups, because of the layout of my house, I could run my exhaust fan for the duration of "lights on" time. This actually had two benefits.
The first is that, as long as I recharged my basement air once or twice a day, I could keep my plants happy with a steady supply of air with 300 ppm CO2.
The second was that the constant draw of air being pulled thru the room created a "negative pressure" in the room. This, combined with a Carbon filter, meant that no smell was released from the room when the lights were on, and the plants were at their "stinkiest".
As I had my "night cycle" during daytime, when I was at work, no-one was in the house to smell anything when the fans were turned off ( I found very little smell emitted from my room when the lights were off, and I could get away with using an oxone machine to kill that little bit of smell upstairs). "Day cycle", which was my nighttime, is the stinkiest time for the plants, so the "constant on" exhaust fans would kill the smell, in case anyone came by.
I ran like this for nearly 2 years, and no one had any idea that there was 8 1000 Watt lights sitting over top of 180 plants, spread across 4 "ebb and flow" hydro tables downstairs.

As far as other advice, I always recommend having your exhaust fan up high in one corner of the room, with the intake door or opening in the diagonally opposite corner of the room, but low to the ground. I also had an 8 inch exhaust opening up high, but a 6 inch intake down low. This is what created the "negative pressure".....by drawing air out of the room faster than it came in.

Of course, this is what I do. It works well for me, but others may have better, or more practical ideas. I encourage you to search the forums and gather as much info as you can, and make decisions based on accumulated information, rather than one man's advice. There are alot of gurus on this site, and I can attest to that as I have read some of their posts. But there are also many people who's advice you should take with a grain of salt.

Growing marijuana has many, many different dynamics, and everyone's layout, upfront costs, money available to purchase equipment....etc. are all different and the possibilities are numerous.

Research, using Jorge Cervantes' books specifically, before the internet, is how I learned everything that allows me to have great success.

I am fairly new to this site, so finding and posting good links will take me a little while, until I have really had time to browse all the great info found here.

If anyone has great links for the OP, please post. Good luck.
 
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