Flowering Times 12on 12off or 9on 15off????

thatboyis1uvakind

New Member
well im assuming my cfl setup is going to do very well in this closet knowing i have 10 cfls shooting out lots of light ...to be honest compared to my old 400 watt hp light cfls kick its ass.....it deff puts out more light and blinds me but the 400 watt hp dont do nuttin like that so im deff sticking with my cfls....and to top it off they give off no heat and save on power and if you youtube cfl grows ull see alot of people getting some nice ammounts off cfl grows....but hands down from the way the light output is and heat difference compared to my old 400 watt hp light im sticking with my cfls

check this link on a cfl grow ...kickass dont talk down cfls now

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g4avJsPGhg0

heres another guy talking about how good cfls are and gets a great yield

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tMp8xzyw6ms
I don't have to you tube it...I do it in real life... View attachment 2509314View attachment 2509314View attachment 2509315View attachment 2509316View attachment 2509319...my space is a lot smaller than a closet n I have a lot more than 10 23 waters...I put that on my seedlings...View attachment 2509335...and here's my seedlings View attachment 2509341...and some finished stuff View attachment 2509344View attachment 2509350I've got some stuff on you tube..."cfls....kush"...have 3 videos....duplicate post see previous post
 

topfuel29

Well-Known Member
On a side note, I'm still amazed growers compare lumens when talking about lights or even foot candles as well...those are measurements of the HUMAN eye. Plants use light for photosynthesis, lumens have nothing to do with the amount of photons absorbed into the leaves of a plant. PARwatts are aspecific measurement for plants. Lumens are just how bright a human interprets a light..
you should write every horticultural light bulb company and tell them there all wrong to put the lumens out-put of there bulbs on the side of there box. :)

"Plants use light energy between 400 and 700 nanometers, the region known as Photosynthetically Active Radiation or PAR.


Illumination for plants, also known as "irradiance", is sometimes measured in PAR watts per square meter (W/m2). Another means of measuring light quantity for plant growth involves discrete units of quantum flux in the PAR region called "photons". Photon flux is commonly measured in units of micromoles per square meter per second (µmoles/m2/s), where 1 mole of photons = 6.022 x 1023 photons.


This is an objective measure since it directly indicates how much light energy is available for plants to use in photosynthesis. However, lamp manufacturers typically rate their lamps in lumens, a measure of light in the spectrum visible to humans. Moreover, most lighting engineers measure lighting levels in lumens per square meter (lux) or per square foot (foot-candles). Since the spectral sensitivities of plants and humans are quite different, there is no direct method of converting the units without evaluating the full range of spectral characteristics for a given light source."
 

thatboyis1uvakind

New Member
you should write every horticultural light bulb company and tell them there all wrong to put the lumens out-put of there bulbs on the side of there box. :)

"Plants use light energy between 400 and 700 nanometers, the region known as Photosynthetically Active Radiation or PAR.


Illumination for plants, also known as "irradiance", is sometimes measured in PAR watts per square meter (W/m2). Another means of measuring light quantity for plant growth involves discrete units of quantum flux in the PAR region called "photons". Photon flux is commonly measured in units of micromoles per square meter per second (µmoles/m2/s), where 1 mole of photons = 6.022 x 1023 photons.


This is an objective measure since it directly indicates how much light energy is available for plants to use in photosynthesis. However, lamp manufacturers typically rate their lamps in lumens, a measure of light in the spectrum visible to humans. Moreover, most lighting engineers measure lighting levels in lumens per square meter (lux) or per square foot (foot-candles). Since the spectral sensitivities of plants and humans are quite different, there is no direct method of converting the units without evaluating the full range of spectral characteristics for a given light source."
Damn right....ha
 

steveepeeps

Active Member
Stick with the 12 hour cycle. Tell your friend he's wrong lol. I have experimented with veg cycles interupted (it does work btw) to save power but never flower cycles. Also it is my understanding that the growth cycle stops when light goes out but may be wrong.
old post but He's on about flower cycle and 9on 15 off works
 
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