I never knew what hot spots meant and now that you explained it, it does sound like bs. Foil is a very good conductor of heat, that's why you can have it at 400 degrees in the oven and remove it by the foil and not burn your hands. I would think that the mylar (aka the material used for emergency blankets) would cause these so called hot spots. If you were to wrap up in aluminum foil in the cold you would freeze your ass off.I've always thought the theory that foil caused hot spots and burned plants was BS. I used foil for many years and never had problems, but granted I was not using the high powered HID lights that are out there today. I could well be wrong. Switched to mylar a few years back and love that stuff.
I think, and I'm far from an expert, that their reasoning for the hotspots is in the way that the foil bends and reflects the light differently wherever it bends. But I use it to cover net-cups in my hydro system...The arguments against Aluminum Foil never made sense to me, and I don't like to go around telling people what to do.
so take this with a gram of 30-10-10...haaaaa... I'd like to say...
I use aluminum foil... There I admit it. I use it like wall paper on my grow room walls...
I have installed a couple of thousand light fixtures in my life, and 99% or them use a aluminum reflector as the light back...
Aluminum reflects light...so tell me why you don't want to reflect any of your extra light that hits your walls?
Maybe if you have a 1000 W MH/HPS then no aluminum foil...
I use heavy duty/wide foil BTW...
My apologies, The [MY] foil isn't very reflective.. More than black painted metal, but not as much as mylar (I haven't used mylar in the past for growing, but I'm familiar with it). I just use it to block light going into net-cups.I hear 2 contradictory stories about foil:
One guy says the foil warps and bends concentrating light like a magnifying glass and will set the plant on fire.
Next guy says don't use aluminum foil as it reflects next to nothing.
Whatever.
No reason to apologize, I wasn't talking about your or any one else's comment in this thread. Just saying I've heard these 2 conflicting arguments many times..My apologies, The [MY] foil isn't very reflective.. More than black painted metal, but not as much as mylar (I haven't used mylar in the past for growing, but I'm familiar with it). I just use it to block light going into net-cups.
If it's a typical mirror (see: things you'd normally find in your house) - I have to disagree, they do absorb light.. in mass quantities. You'd need a dilelectric mirror with multiple layers of dielectric material, effectively forming a coating.. to get anywhere near 99.9%+ of the light reflected - anyway.I don't think a lot of people understand how this works. You can tell if something is a good reflector just by going "Ooo that's shiny!" I can't stand when people try to say mirrors absorb light (this just proves my point that a lot of people really don't understand shit about what they're doing.) they don't absorb light, they just do not disperse the light whatsoever. Foil does not turn light into heat, it conducts heat very well though, which would mean your walls of your box getting hot. If it's not a dark color, it's not turning light into heat, if it's god damn silver it's turning almost none into heat energy.
Exactly, I've got folds and wrinkles in my mylar and can see bright spots on the plants where it is focusing light but have never experienced burning.I guess mylar could work, still have hotspot potential
This Guiy IS The Worst Person YOU Could EVER Tack any Advice From ~ Look at his GROW jorn. There a Jokenah, foil turns light energy into heat energy easily.
get some poster board, flat white paint etc.
See my sig?This Guiy IS The Worst Person YOU Could EVER Tack any Advice From ~ Look at his GROW jorn. There a Joke
Its worth a Look Just for The Laugh!