rory420420
Well-Known Member
Well,the fact that certain wavelengths are only effective and at their fullest spectrum at certain lengths/heights certainly throws an Italic "i" in the equation...
Hang em high.
Hang em high.
What are you using to measure? Sounds to me like an issue of not comparing apples to apples here.So you see...am I really running 108,000 lumens or is it more like 45,000? I'd say measurements taken at canopy are far more accurate than those taken at the the bulb, or 12 inches from source. Or even worse...the box the bulb came in.
Look at the good scale. At the canopy you want to be in the 5000-8000 range without CO2. Over 8000 you need CO2 for benefit.It's basic lumen depreciation based on inverse square law. Lumen output is reduced to 1/4 value every twelve inches.
100,000 lumens at 12" is 100,000.
100,000 lumens at 24" is 25,000 lumens
100,000 lumens at 36" is 6,250 lumens
And so on and so on.
This makes sense that my 108,000 lumens at 16" is measuring 45,000 ish lumens. Making sense?
If this were true it would render the inverse square law as it pertains to lumen depreciation invalid!lumens per sqft are measured from the bulb. It's simply the total lumens output divided by the sqft of the area. It's an apples to oranges comparison measuring at any distance then doing the math.
You adjust the height of your lights to match the plants. The lumens/sqft is a way to size the system to produce the lumens needed. Then you adjust height to keep the canopy in the sweet spot. If you go vertical you add side lighting to keep everything in the sweet spot. It's about trying to get as close to 7500 lm to the nugs as possible, or more if you add CO2.I am not so sure. Seems to me that the bulb rating for Lumen output is relative to the bulb not the area it will be used in (which would be measure by L/SF in order to determine the amount of actual light in a given area.)
Those scales are dividing the total lumens by the sqft of the circle they would project on the floor at that distance. The ideal number without CO2 is about 7500. So just the 600 HPS would be ideal at about 23-24" from the canopy. At 23.5" it projects a circle of about 12 sqft and should measure 7500lm at the plant surface or 7500 lumens per sqft.Are u saying 7500 lumens per square foot. Or at any given point? What unit of measurement are you referring to? Perhaps in missing something. But I haven't had a problem yet...so far, excellent results. The damn...upload a file...button doesn't work! Lmao
At that distance you would have less than ideal spread, the middle would be substantially higher than 7500, the outside would be less. You would actually be better putting it higher up and taking the reflector loss for better distribution. With single big lights distribution becomes the bitch.So youre saying a 600 w hps at 24" from bulb is OPTIMAL lighting for a 12 sq ft area or a 4ft x 3ft area with ACERAGE co2 concentrations?
I could see how this would be SUFFICIENT for a decent yield and quality but I doubt it's optimal...do you have any source you could provide to prove the basis of the information?