I think we are over simplifying things. There are far too many variations on vertical growing to say this or that is right.
Stadium, cages, trees, double stacked lights..
The principles are the same no matter the growing style: vertical lighting is more optimum than horizontal lighting because there is no reflector (reflected light is weaker than direct light), and you are making use of almost 360 degrees of direct light (vertical) instead of about 120 degrees of direct light and 240 degrees of reflected light (horizontal). There is also less canopy heat (no hoods to trap heat from the bulb), and you can get your plants very close to the bulb/s.
I will tell you this though and this is absolutely the truth, the tighter your spacing the more biomass and leaf area there is for the production of carbohydrates that will ultimately result in flower formation.
In my opinion, this is rarely true. My indicas have tighter nodes than my haze plants, and my haze plants absolutely
kill my indicas for yield - 2-3 times as much yield each and every grow.
Tighter nodes can actually
limit bud production, because as each node flowers, it grows and shields light from the node above it. If you have intermediately spaced nodes to begin with, each bud site tends to fill the space in-between and does not get shaded. Dense growth has its limits (and is also prone to mould).
My Stinky Cat Piss Haze is a classic example of this: it stretches like you wouldn't believe, then fills in all the nodes with long, sticky buds that make maximum use of the vertical lighting while my more compact plants don't. Haze varieties consistently yield better than other strains in my vertical set-up.
legallyflying said:
A bigger plant will ALWAYS produce more ALWAYS. A plants yield is quite simply the result of the balance between production and utilization of carbohydrates. The more it can produce the more it will yield.
Indeed. A 5'-6' tall haze will outyield a 3'-4' indica in my set-up every time. But what you have to remember is "bigger" can also mean "longer" as well as "thicker" (never mind the width, gov, feel the length).
legallyflying said:
You do have to factor in light saturation, co2, temps... Basically all the parameters that govern chemical relations but at the core bigger or tighter is more..that was my point
This is where we obviously agree to disagree. All things being equal, tight nodes are certainly no guarantee of high yields in vertical growing. It is only really true of horizontal growing.
Why? Because tight nodes in horizontal growing go hand-in-hand with light intensity - the denser the light, the tighter the nodes for a particular strain. And this is because both the light and nodes are growing UP - stacking on top of each other. Vertical buds grow OUT and up - not straight up.
If a horizontal system doesn't have enough light, the plant will stretch, the nodes will be further spaced, and the lower branches will get less and less light as you raise the lamp to keep up with plant growth.
Vertical lights stay pretty much where they are in comparison (they're raised a little during bloom to keep up with plant growth, but only a little). If you don't have enough light, the buds tend to be airy. But the node spacing isn't affected as much, because the plant isn't stretching UP towards the light, it is stretch OUT towards the light.
See the difference? You need to turn everything you have ever learned on its side