badassledsystems
Member
Hey everyone, I'm new to the site, but not to the hobby.
I am thinking about designing and possibly manufacturing a cost effective LED lighting system. I think these systems are the way of the future, but the current available systems seem to be slightly outdated because LED technology changes so often. I have read a great deal of information regarding LED's vs. HID's. That being said, there still seems to be some confusion and lack of continuity of scientific information out there. This thread is designed to gather input from those of you that are "pros" in this. Please contribute openly.
LED systems that are currently available utilize specific wavelengths, usually blue & red. From my very basic understanding, chlorophyll a peaks both at 430nm AND just slightly less at 662nm. Chlorophyll b peaks at 453nm and then slightly less at 652nm. The currently available LED systems usually only push two wavelengths, the two major ones for chlorophyll aborbtion, which push ATP and NADPH. While I know that plants primarily use certain wavelengths of light, there are other wavelengths that are needed by plants, such as beta carotene, phycoerythin and phycocyanin. Plants need more than two wavelengths, not that it can't be done by two, obviously. I am slightly skeptical of capitalism when it comes to producing the best product. I'm curious if years ago, vendors jumped on the LED bandwagon and pushed inferior products with specific wavelengths (emitters that were cheaper than white, not better) in a rush to get on the front of the LED market to make bigger profits, not better products.
Would it be beneficial to create LED grow systems that use white light instead of the narrow spectrums that are available now? I know that much of the needed wavelengths are in blue/red, but there ARE others. I have a supplier than can provide 10W, 20W, 50W, 100W and 200W LEDs in 6500K-7000K white ("full spectrum"). They can also provide me with 10W, 20W, 50W and 100W red & blue (of appropriate wavelengths).
I have two real questions here, with some sub questions...
1) Is it worth inventing a high powered WHITE LED system that covers all spectrum? And if so, how highly powered would be smart? Would it be marketable to create powerful WHITE LED systems, like a true 600-1000W (or more), simply because of the savings in cooling costs compared to HIDs?
2) If the above question isn't feasible or marketable, would it be worth creating a higher powered LED system that utilizes the traditional 2 wavelengths? Would there be any growing advantage to using the 10W, 20W, 50W or 100W red/blue spectrums (for 250-1000W+ total in the 2 spectrums) instead of the current lower powered systems that are available? Would the extra lumens provided by a high powered 2 spectrum system like this provide any benefits in comparison to the available products out there? Again, this concept like the WHITE LED concept, would also be more about the savings in cooling costs instead of only lower power usage.
It seems this technology has come a long ways since the days of 1W, 3W & 5W bulbs.
What do you all think? Is there any logic to what I'm thinking about creating, or am I trying to illogically reinvent the wheel?
I am hardly an engineer, or fully educated scientist, which is why I'm here getting input. Please chime in.
I am thinking about designing and possibly manufacturing a cost effective LED lighting system. I think these systems are the way of the future, but the current available systems seem to be slightly outdated because LED technology changes so often. I have read a great deal of information regarding LED's vs. HID's. That being said, there still seems to be some confusion and lack of continuity of scientific information out there. This thread is designed to gather input from those of you that are "pros" in this. Please contribute openly.
LED systems that are currently available utilize specific wavelengths, usually blue & red. From my very basic understanding, chlorophyll a peaks both at 430nm AND just slightly less at 662nm. Chlorophyll b peaks at 453nm and then slightly less at 652nm. The currently available LED systems usually only push two wavelengths, the two major ones for chlorophyll aborbtion, which push ATP and NADPH. While I know that plants primarily use certain wavelengths of light, there are other wavelengths that are needed by plants, such as beta carotene, phycoerythin and phycocyanin. Plants need more than two wavelengths, not that it can't be done by two, obviously. I am slightly skeptical of capitalism when it comes to producing the best product. I'm curious if years ago, vendors jumped on the LED bandwagon and pushed inferior products with specific wavelengths (emitters that were cheaper than white, not better) in a rush to get on the front of the LED market to make bigger profits, not better products.
Would it be beneficial to create LED grow systems that use white light instead of the narrow spectrums that are available now? I know that much of the needed wavelengths are in blue/red, but there ARE others. I have a supplier than can provide 10W, 20W, 50W, 100W and 200W LEDs in 6500K-7000K white ("full spectrum"). They can also provide me with 10W, 20W, 50W and 100W red & blue (of appropriate wavelengths).
I have two real questions here, with some sub questions...
1) Is it worth inventing a high powered WHITE LED system that covers all spectrum? And if so, how highly powered would be smart? Would it be marketable to create powerful WHITE LED systems, like a true 600-1000W (or more), simply because of the savings in cooling costs compared to HIDs?
2) If the above question isn't feasible or marketable, would it be worth creating a higher powered LED system that utilizes the traditional 2 wavelengths? Would there be any growing advantage to using the 10W, 20W, 50W or 100W red/blue spectrums (for 250-1000W+ total in the 2 spectrums) instead of the current lower powered systems that are available? Would the extra lumens provided by a high powered 2 spectrum system like this provide any benefits in comparison to the available products out there? Again, this concept like the WHITE LED concept, would also be more about the savings in cooling costs instead of only lower power usage.
It seems this technology has come a long ways since the days of 1W, 3W & 5W bulbs.
What do you all think? Is there any logic to what I'm thinking about creating, or am I trying to illogically reinvent the wheel?
I am hardly an engineer, or fully educated scientist, which is why I'm here getting input. Please chime in.