Blunt Master Flex
Active Member
Now that I have your attention, I had a thought pop into my head the other day and I think this could be big.
If we are in fact trying to simulate outdoors as much as possible, then would simulating a sunrise/set affect be beneficial?
So,you have four lights IN A ROW obviously these lights have plants under all of them, for this example lets name these lights A,B,C and D. And for the sake of simplicity, lets say the time your flower room will be lit is between 12PM and 12AM. Light "A" would come on from 12PM and turn off at 9PM, lights "B" and "C" would come on at 2PM and turn off at 10PM and light "D" would turn on at 3PM and back off at 12AM. That is just an example, may not be the best combination of times.
This is just a thought and I am not saying in any way that this is definitely going to help your plants, but maybe? If the yield was comparable to running all those lights on for 12 hours it would be HUGE! The lighting schedule above would lower electricity consumption (with the lights) by about 30%!
I would like to test this out, but don't have a room big enough to try this right now. I am limited to 2000w and it seems that you would need at least three lights to try this. But I figured I'd throw it out there and maybe somebody else might give it a go.
If we are in fact trying to simulate outdoors as much as possible, then would simulating a sunrise/set affect be beneficial?
So,you have four lights IN A ROW obviously these lights have plants under all of them, for this example lets name these lights A,B,C and D. And for the sake of simplicity, lets say the time your flower room will be lit is between 12PM and 12AM. Light "A" would come on from 12PM and turn off at 9PM, lights "B" and "C" would come on at 2PM and turn off at 10PM and light "D" would turn on at 3PM and back off at 12AM. That is just an example, may not be the best combination of times.
This is just a thought and I am not saying in any way that this is definitely going to help your plants, but maybe? If the yield was comparable to running all those lights on for 12 hours it would be HUGE! The lighting schedule above would lower electricity consumption (with the lights) by about 30%!
I would like to test this out, but don't have a room big enough to try this right now. I am limited to 2000w and it seems that you would need at least three lights to try this. But I figured I'd throw it out there and maybe somebody else might give it a go.