iivan740
Well-Known Member
9inch bigbud tells everyone it's the intensity and penetration of the 1000 watter that does the trick. Then he proceeds to show everyone and tell us again that it's intensity and penetration. Someone tell me what is so hard to understand?
The intensity of the single 1000 watt buld allows penetration deeper into the foilage, this allows the plant to use more light. And hows that you say>>>>>...... he canopy can only use so much light, put 1000000000000 lumens on the canopy alone and it will only process what it can and the rest will go to waste, but allow the intensity of those lumens to force their way down to the forest floor or in our case the crop base and the rest of the plant will be able to process more of the light. It turns out to be a matter of square footage, one leaf can only process so much light, two can process more, three can process more, and so on and so forth.
The intensity of the 1 1000 watt buld is most definitly stronger than the 2 600 watt bulbs. Try this little experiment get 2 60 watt bulbs and one 100 watt bulb. plug the two 60's into a lamp, turn them on and look at them. Now replace the 60's with the single 100, turn it on, and look at it. Which was harder to look at. That's right boys and girls the 100 has more intensity than the 2 60's combined.
So, more intensity = deeper penetration = more photosynthesis, because more of the chlorophyll gets access to the light. The deminishing returns only applies once the entire plant (top to bottom) has been saturated with all of the light it can handle, and it turns out that for most plants the saturation point is between 3000 and 9000 lumens...
Hope this helps and isn't to discumbobulated......
O' and if it's not blatently obvious, I would recommend the 1000 watter, especially for dwarfs, or bushy sativas.
The intensity of the single 1000 watt buld allows penetration deeper into the foilage, this allows the plant to use more light. And hows that you say>>>>>...... he canopy can only use so much light, put 1000000000000 lumens on the canopy alone and it will only process what it can and the rest will go to waste, but allow the intensity of those lumens to force their way down to the forest floor or in our case the crop base and the rest of the plant will be able to process more of the light. It turns out to be a matter of square footage, one leaf can only process so much light, two can process more, three can process more, and so on and so forth.
The intensity of the 1 1000 watt buld is most definitly stronger than the 2 600 watt bulbs. Try this little experiment get 2 60 watt bulbs and one 100 watt bulb. plug the two 60's into a lamp, turn them on and look at them. Now replace the 60's with the single 100, turn it on, and look at it. Which was harder to look at. That's right boys and girls the 100 has more intensity than the 2 60's combined.
So, more intensity = deeper penetration = more photosynthesis, because more of the chlorophyll gets access to the light. The deminishing returns only applies once the entire plant (top to bottom) has been saturated with all of the light it can handle, and it turns out that for most plants the saturation point is between 3000 and 9000 lumens...
Hope this helps and isn't to discumbobulated......
O' and if it's not blatently obvious, I would recommend the 1000 watter, especially for dwarfs, or bushy sativas.