No it isn't its like 2 bucks for 6 feet by 4 feet. Its worth it unless you have a big grow room with lots of plants.Mylar is much too expensive, that's why you only get like 2-6mils of it. You could coat something with it like metal or plastic, but for the price you could just get aluminum.
If mylar is cheap to a consumer then it's cheaper to a company that buys vast quantities of it. However lets get back to the point, forget mass manufacturing for the moment.We're talking mass production not store prices here. Mylar is a made through a chemical process and has to be sourced or you need a factory. Specular aluminum just needs a roller.
Wrong. These are totally different business. Manufacturers are not Chemical Labratories ie Dupont. They can buy mylar at their markup, then pay labor to process it. Or they can buy aluminum in bulk at a much better price and process it in house. Either way Mylar is a film so it has to be surfaced onto something to build a reflector or hood. It's just not feasible for profits.If mylar is cheap to a consumer then it's cheaper to a company that buys vast quantities of it. However lets get back to the point, forget mass manufacturing for the moment.
I have some flexible wooden panels which could be formed into the perfect shape for a reflector. If i coat these with mylar sheeting, making sure to keep the sheet crease free, would it work well as a reflector or is there some drawback i'm not seeing?
Ok great so it would work if carefully glued to some wooden panels, if i understood you correctly. I do have a lux meter to measure the output i was just concerned it might melt or something.No not really it would work. In fact it ha a slightly better reflective rating. It's simply not used by companies for profit margins alone. That's not to say there may not be some doing it.
The difference in reflectivity between polished dimpled high-grade aluminum and Mylar is negligible, some reflective hoods claim higher reflectivity than Mylar. One MAJOR difference would be durability. Mylar loses a good deal of its reflectivity when dirty so it needs to be cleaned and it will lose some reflectivity over time. It is also soft and easy to cut/scrape/tear and aluminum is much, MUCH tougher. A Mylar covered reflective hood would need to be 'relined' to keep the reflectivity up.I know aluminium is used alot of the time for reflectors, but can you use mylar? I know it reflects an enormous amount of light so why isn't it used more often?
Thanks.
Flash point, sure but it's also going to dry out a lot faster and not be as supportive. Plus if your light shorts out or starts arcing it won't catch metal on fire but it just may wood.