THE KONASSURE
Well-Known Member
RIP
All of them !
All of them !
So he did a search and upon reading the results came up with a question. Problem? In fact, he probably would have been blasted and told to do a search if he had asked directly.
cool.. thank youYour plants will tell you if you are giving them too much. Leaves on top will begin to turn white. Just increase the distance from the plant. I'd highly recommend an LED. They produce little heat, and save money on electric. $160 for a King Plus 1000 watt, $145 for 800 watt. LED made everything easier.
Actually plants don't use 'lumens' ; the better measurement is PAR, none the less it is useful for my lazy purposes to use watts per square foot. A good place to start to really understand your underlying question is here: http://www.windows2universe.org/earth/climate/sun_radiation_at_earth.htmlHow many lumens per square foot is absolutely too much for a plant? I know it may very with seedlings and clones and what not, I am wondering for strong plants, around 1 foot tall, what is the absolute highest lumens you can put on them, or is the only limit the heat you produce with the lights?
Lux is a poor tool for determining the growing potential of a light, lumens (lux) are a measure of light visible by the human eye and not the usable light a plant can use to grow. Par (watts) are a more accurate method of determining growth abilities in plants,PAR watts directly indicate how much light energy is available for plants to use in photosynthesis , that being said a google search of par will tell you everything you need to know about it . For the old schoolers out there , 5k + lumens per foot square is the standard for giving plants optimal growth, The only time I have ever seen bleaching is from a 1 k hps with super good airflow placed about 10 inches above the canopy of a group of plants, Or several times with hi quality diy led lights .I just purchased a lux meter to measure my 1000w MH bulb and I found that I was greatly exceeding the recommended levels from Grow Weed Easy by running over 105k lux in some spots. See below for their recommendations.
Quick Guide - Lux Levels for Optimal Cannabis Growth
Life Stage Maximum Good Minimum
Vegetative 70,000 lux 40,000 lux 15,000 lux
Flowering 85,000 lux 60,000 lux 35,000 lux
< 15,000 lux - sparse or "stretchy" growth - plant isn't getting enough light
15,000 - 50,000 lux - good amount of light for healthy vegetative growth
45,000 - 65,000 lux - optimal amount of light for cannabis plants in the flowering (budding) stage
70,000 - 85,000 lux - a lot of light, some strains do okay at this light level, but some plants lose their top leaves early under this light intensity, especially plants that are not resistant to heat/light (like many indicas)
> 85,000 lux - at this light intensity, you've hit the plant's "saturation point" which means your plant can't use all the light (be careful of light bleaching!)