mustbetribbin
Well-Known Member
I think that @Thundercat & @Kingrow1 both made good points here that I would like to pick up on.Instead of targeting the hps spectrum I think we should target the sun. Everyone agrees that the sun grows better weed then anything else right? Well then let's aim to make our lights as close to the sun as possible..... Full spectrum with uv for a good tan!
Step two intensity, and this is where lots of people that run LED go a stray I think. The sun puts an average of 1500 ppfd onto a canopy over the day. Most LED growers I see turn their lights down for efficiency and only run a few hundred ppfd. That isn't how you replicate the sun....
Thundercat mentioned that the sun and it's light is very difficult to beat because of its full spectrum light that it produces year around, and the color changes to far red as the seasons change and so forth.
While I'll admit kingrow1 did make some points I don't agree with entirely (besides being a bit obnoxious) one point he did mention is that lighting is specific to each type of plant or strain, with the various DNA codes and chlorophyll levels, hormones, terpenes and other chemicals found in each specific and unique plant species or strain, the point being that plants all use light differently, some plants us more blue or red spectrum while others may find more use/efficiency/survival out of using more yellow, orange or green spectrum and so forth.
Basically the type of lighting used is plant and strain specific, each plant is going to utilize the energy that it receives from the light or protons in a different way, however slight it may be.
This is why the sun has the entire spectrum covered, because the entire world of plants known to exist on Earth exist by using the same exact light source, the Sun, and the sun provides ample amounts of energy/light for each exact and specific species to survive and exist, this is why lighting is still not fully understood by many people across the world because one type one light band spectrum will not work 100% for every plant, each exact plant has specific needs to be dialed in to full optimization, this is why people who provide ample spectrum to their plants have the most success, no one light fits all so to speak, it's about allowing the plant to decide what type of light is most efficient for it own growth, it's not up to us humans to decide what nature does on a cellular level, nature has its own way of excelling in the continuation of each specific species that is known to exist, we humans can only do so much to allow for nature to take its course.
Last edited: