right, but i believe you'll need a few thousand wired together for anything really productive. which wont save much on electricity except that they hardly generate any heat(less cooling). and their life expectancy is VERY long like over 100,000 hours--the advantage to that is that the quality of light doesnt diminish much at all whether its at 1 hour of use or already has 90,000 hours under its belt. i know one of those mart stores selling 100 strip leds for like $10 a strand. i've consider buying them to try it out as suppliment light on the low sides. if i get around to getting any ill put it in my ghetto-tech journalleds are simple to wire into circuit boards. with a little soldering expririence you could wire a 100 or so in a couple hours
The thing is.. normal rgb leds dont emitt the ultraviolet and infrared spectrums of light, outside of the normal range of vision of the human eye. So in effect you have 100% control over the visual spectrum, not the ultra-violet low spectrum and infra red high spectrum light... however there are leds that produce infra red like the ones used in a television remote to transmit signals.the current new nifty thing about LEDs is that they've managed to combine a Red Blue and a Green LED into one unit that can be controlled very simply. So while some of y'alls comments about spectrum are relevant, what you have to realize that you could have 100% control over what spectrum an LED group emitted.
900 leds only use like 20-30 watts....so yeah you will definitely save money.right, but i believe you'll need a few thousand wired together for anything really productive. which wont save much on electricity except that they hardly generate any heat(less cooling). and their life expectancy is VERY long like over 100,000 hours--the advantage to that is that the quality of light doesnt diminish much at all whether its at 1 hour of use or already has 90,000 hours under its belt. i know one of those mart stores selling 100 strip leds for like $10 a strand. i've consider buying them to try it out as suppliment light on the low sides. if i get around to getting any ill put it in my ghetto-tech journal
Plants dont use green light, thats why you use a green light bulb to work on your garden in the dark so you dont interrupt the plants sleep.the current new nifty thing about LEDs is that they've managed to combine a Red Blue and a Green LED into one unit that can be controlled very simply. So while some of y'alls comments about spectrum are relevant, what you have to realize that you could have 100% control over what spectrum an LED group emitted.
And as for efficiency, they are extremely efficient. So much so, that they are replacing most halogen bulbs in flashlights for anyone who actually uses one very much.
That said, I have not started using them in my grow, because I wanted to use the advice of other growers since I'm new. So I'm using the tools they're familiar with. Maybe in 2 years I'll consider converting.
But imagine being able to get HPS results yet being able to hang the bulbs a half inch away from your plant. That's what LEDs promise to us. And oh yeah, they don't need a ballast. And they don't all burn out at once. Just one or two at a time.
You ever notice those new stop lights that never burn out anymore? They just have a few "pixels" not lighting any more? Those are LEDs.
My French is pretty marginal, but it looks straightforward to me. They've laid out how they balance the LEDs for vegetation and flowering, along with the photoperiods and wavelengths of the LEDs.Hi Everybody,
I've found a french website where they are using some leds...
La culture sous led ou l'avenir des ampoules économiques - Ampoules d'intérieurs
I think it will help you, if you understand french naturaly.
Bye