cfl bulbs from walmart?!?

growone

Well-Known Member
is there any way to tell what spectrum they are cause most of them dont say on any of them. I have a 65w cfl thats is 2700k but i need 65k for veg right
if you mean the spectral diagrams, these are available on the manufacturer sites
interpreting them though is not straight forward - i read through some articles some advanced growers had put together, didn't save the links though
 

growone

Well-Known Member
this is pretty close to the topic, best cheap cfl's
my 2 cents is the 2700k 26w GE cfl's are pretty good, especially for the price, they seem to have a bit more kick than others with 67 lumens/watt
 

matsumoto

Member
been collecting materials for my first grow. hoping to start next week. got a real small space inside some stacked apple boxes (12"x20"x40") i've check all the typical stores like home depot, lowes, wal mart... and they all have cfls ranging in the 2600K region. but i wanted something higher to veg. didn't want to order from a lighting supplier b/c itd be be hard to explan why i felt it necessary to special order lamp lights, but i came across these:
http://www.amazon.com/Full-Spectrum-Light-Bulb-Daylight/dp/B00198U6U6/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=hi&qid=1253667080&sr=1-1

free shipping option means it comes from amazon in an unassuming package. took the opportunity to pick up a 100x pocket microscope and herb grinder (also free ship).
this is so exciting lol.
 

moash

New Member
been collecting materials for my first grow. hoping to start next week. got a real small space inside some stacked apple boxes (12"x20"x40") i've check all the typical stores like home depot, lowes, wal mart... and they all have cfls ranging in the 2600K region. but i wanted something higher to veg. didn't want to order from a lighting supplier b/c itd be be hard to explan why i felt it necessary to special order lamp lights, but i came across these:
http://www.amazon.com/Full-Spectrum-Light-Bulb-Daylight/dp/B00198U6U6/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=hi&qid=1253667080&sr=1-1

free shipping option means it comes from amazon in an unassuming package. took the opportunity to pick up a 100x pocket microscope and herb grinder (also free ship).
this is so exciting lol.
those lights will work but $40 for 4 cfl's....kinda pricey
 

Genosyde

Well-Known Member
growone...thanks i will check them out...any reccomendations on lights? Not trying to steal the thread lol!
Bright white, Daylight, Cool White all represent blue specs 6500k or close. the ones like warm white, soft white etc represent red specs 2700k or close. as far as lights, the highest watts you can find for the lowests price lol. all flourescents will work for growing, especially for vegging, just gotta have enough watts/lumens per square foot. 100 watts per square foot/10'000 lumens per square foot. just "K.I.S.S." and youll be fine
 

moash

New Member
bright white, daylight, cool white all represent blue specs 6500k or close. The ones like warm white, soft white etc represent red specs 2700k or close. As far as lights, the highest watts you can find for the lowests price lol. All flourescents will work for growing, especially for vegging, just gotta have enough watts/lumens per square foot. 100 watts per square foot/10'000 lumens per square foot. Just "k.i.s.s." and youll be fine
"kiss"????????????????
 

matsumoto

Member
1000bulbs.com

*bookmarked. thank you. will try them out next time. the 65watters look nice. pricey. but its a hobby. budgets grow. as do buds.

:)
 

smellmyfinger

Active Member
Wal-Mart, the 42 watt GE bulbs. My area they are $8.00 each, or close to it. They are 2700k in color, ironically also 2700 lumens. If you can afford 6 buy them. You can get the smaller bulbs in 6500k for veg but don't fret about it. Trust me, plenty of folks have grown just fine using just 2700k CFL's from start to finish.
 

elgalloloco

Active Member
I was thinking of doing the same thing, but i wanted to know how to do it with at least one or two lights. I found a 150w CFL at Home Depot today and they also had the lower wattages. Let me know if i could use the 150w and a lower wattage light and be OK?
I wouldn't reccomend the 150w cfl. they put out much more heat than the lower wattage cfl's and the lumens just don't add up to make it worth it. I'd say you're better off with a bunch of low wattage bulbs.
 

Genosyde

Well-Known Member
I wouldn't reccomend the 150w cfl. they put out much more heat than the lower wattage cfl's and the lumens just don't add up to make it worth it. I'd say you're better off with a bunch of low wattage bulbs.
i agree, if you wanna deal with heat issues, just get an HID
 

ablepipeman

Active Member
ok so what i have right now is 4 26 watt cfl 6500k putting off 1600 lumens each, a 65w cfl 2700k at about 2500 lumens, a shop light with 2 flourecent grow lights that puts off 3200 lumens @ 40w each, puts me at about 13,000 lumens, and about 250 actual watts for 3 plants? ya all think this will work?
 

Argentino619

Active Member
ok so what i have right now is 4 26 watt cfl 6500k putting off 1600 lumens each, a 65w cfl 2700k at about 2500 lumens, a shop light with 2 flourecent grow lights that puts off 3200 lumens @ 40w each, puts me at about 13,000 lumens, and about 250 actual watts for 3 plants? ya all think this will work?
how do i know how much K each cfl light bulb has at walmart. does it say on it, im going tomorrow and just wanna know in advanced
 

smellmyfinger

Active Member
how do i know how much K each cfl light bulb has at walmart. does it say on it, im going tomorrow and just wanna know in advanced
The soft white are 2700k and the daylight is 6500k. Someone correct me if I'm wrong. This is for the ge bulbs, not sure if others follow this or not. Also try mfg website or google the UPC . I have only seen the 42 watters from wm to be sw or 2700k.
 

Genosyde

Well-Known Member
how do i know how much K each cfl light bulb has at walmart. does it say on it, im going tomorrow and just wanna know in advanced
just look at the watts and focus on what spectrum it is, daylight, bright white, cool white = 6500k.warm white or soft white = 2700k. also check the lumens.daylights are blue, softwhite is red. daylight to veg, softwhite to bloom, its that simple.
 

Genosyde

Well-Known Member
The soft white are 2700k and the daylight is 6500k. Someone correct me if I'm wrong. This is for the ge bulbs, not sure if others follow this or not. Also try mfg website or google the UPC . I have only seen the 42 watters from wm to be sw or 2700k.
people still buy into the whole name brand quality shit? lol Ge, Generic, its all the same. i bought 23 watt softwhite bulbs for 92 cents a peice and they work just fine. its like putting generic ketchup in a heinz bottle, normally you wouldnt like it if it wasnt heinz, but if it was switched you wouldnt even know the fucking difference. if you wanna focus on quality, focus on your power strip surge protector and your breaker box wiring. ultimately thats all you would have to worry about, not your damn cfls not working for its goal electrically anyway :-|
 

Genosyde

Well-Known Member
ok so what i have right now is 4 26 watt cfl 6500k putting off 1600 lumens each, a 65w cfl 2700k at about 2500 lumens, a shop light with 2 flourecent grow lights that puts off 3200 lumens @ 40w each, puts me at about 13,000 lumens, and about 250 actual watts for 3 plants? ya all think this will work?
it should work, but the rule of thumb is 100 watts per plant and 50 more for each additional plant/10'000 lumens per square foot. so just to the math with the L' x W' that you are working with. smoke on
 
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