Ten Myths of Lighting Revealed

la9

Well-Known Member
1. HID lamps give off more heat.
All lamps of the same wattage give off more or less the same amount of heat. A 400W metal halide or HPS lamp gives off the same heat as ten 40W fluorescent tubes or four 100W incandescents. The HID lamps will be hotter because all the heat is being given off in such a small space, but the total heat is the same. A fluorescent tube will gently warm the whole shelf while a HID bulb will fry a few square inches of plant and hardly touch the rest.
2a. HID lamps have better "penetration"
2b. Light from fluorescent lamps drops off too quickly with distance.
Two ways of saying the same thing really, but both wrong. The same wattage of fluorescent light used at the same distance as a HID lamp provides equal "penetration". This myth arises because people tend to use fluorescent lights very close to plants (to compensate for having less power) and HID lights quite far away. The difference in light intensity between the top of a plant 2" from a light and the bottom maybe 12" from the light is very large, while the difference between 20" and 30" from a light is relatively small. No difference if you have the same amount of light, the fluorescents may actually perform better because the light is distributed more evenly.
3. GRO-LUX type lamps are less effective because they are less bright.
GRO-LUX fluorescents appear dim to our eyes because they emit light that our eyes are not sensitive to. However the total light power emitted is basically the same as an average fluorescent tube. The light emitted at wavelengths good for plants is as much as any fluorescent and more than many.
4. Plants only use red and blue light, green light is useless.
Plants use light at all wavelenghts from near ultraviolet to near infrared to convert water and carbon dioxide into sugars. They use red light near 650nm most efficiently, then blue light near 620nm, then light in between. Some plants are much less efficient at using green light, some use it almost as well as red and blue. All plants have some capacity to adapt to best utilise the available light.
5. Blue light is for growth, red light is for flowering.
Plants will grow under monochromatic red light. Plants grow faster with a little blue light (with the same total light power). Plants grow slower under monochromatic blue light because the same power produces fewer photons. Approximately 25% of the power in blue light appears to be best, but probably varies for different circumstances and plants.
6. LEDs are ("ultra-bright", "extremely low power", "used by NASA", "monochromatic", or pick your own catchphrase) therefore they are the best grow lamps.
LEDs look ultra-bright because they are small and emit all the light in one direction. This is great if you want to grow a single blade of grass and not much help for most anything else. LEDs are extremely low power because they are small and emit very little total light. This means you need a lot of them to grow anything useful and then they use a lot of power. NASA has experimented with LEDs because they are small, light, and nearly indestructable. None of these features are particularly valuable to the average plant grower. Many LEDs emit a very narrow range of light wavelengths, which means they can be calibrated to emit only the light most useful for plants. That's exactly what a GRO-LUX lamp does and the fluorescent GRO-LUX does it about five times more efficiently.
7. T5 fluorescents are the newest and best.
The new generation of T5 fluorescent tubes is extremely efficient and compact, both desirable features for a grow light system. They are as efficient as some metal halide bulbs. Unfortunately they are mostly being sold as premium items with a premium price tag and often with expensive custom fixtures. For the same money, a good HID setup would be better and for less money you can get the same light from standard fluorescents.
8. A windowsill isn't bright enough, you have to use artificial lights.
Direct sunlight through a window is far brighter than any grow lights most of us will ever see, use it when you can. The limitations are that there is very little direct sunlight in the middle of winter at temperate latitudes and there is only so much space directly in those south-facing windows. Indirect light in a south-facing window is poor, indirect light in any other direction is completely inadequate, and light more than a foot or so from a window is virtually useless to a high light plant.
9. Two fluorescent bulbs aren't enough, you need at least four.
The number of fluorescent tubes you need depends completely on how much light you want. Some plants need more light than others. Lighting a larger area requires more light. It is difficult to use more than two fluorescent tubes to light a strip the width of a seed tray, so two tubes are sufficient for a single row of trays. At the other extreme, four 40W fluorescent tubes are completely inadequate for lighting twenty mature tomato plants.
10. Cool white bulbs emit blue light and warm white bulbs emit red light, so mix them if you want both red and blue. Warm white bulbs emit most of their light in the red part of the spectrum with only a small amount of green and blue light. Standard cool white (4100K) bulbs emit more blue light, but still more red than blue. "Daylight" 6500K bulbs emit roughly equal amounts blue and red light power, which still means about twice as many red photons as blue photons. So any of these tubes emit a lot of red light and some blue light, the difference is in the details.
 

onthedl0008

Well-Known Member
Yea i remember seeing this thread awhile ago, And got excited! This should answer any questions anyone should have concerning lighting at any stage of growth.
Especially for newbies, Besides picking ur growing styles and mediums, lighting is just as important to achieve the best and most cost effective results for theyre grow.
Nice Work!
 

CaptE

Active Member
how many cfls or 4ft t5s would it take to give off a heat signature that can be viewed through your house from the outside? how many watts of hps?
 

MeL1keS2SmOk1e

Active Member
I just switched from a lighting rig I built with 10 42 watt CFL's. Did I waste my money switching to a 400 watt metal halide/HPS system? From your post, I think I did. Almost everything I've been reading on here was that the HID lighting was the bees knees.
 

BigBudBalls

Well-Known Member
I'd like to comment on the heat part.
If a bulb is 100F The room can only reach 100F. If you have 20 of them its will still only reach 100F, just faster. (more watts the faster, but not the top temp)
 

MeL1keS2SmOk1e

Active Member
I'm no expert, but I'd disagree with you on that big bud balls. If the room can dissipate the heat from 20 lamps as fast as it could 1, then yes. That's where the air exchange would come into play. More watts, or voltamps equals more heat.
 

BigBudBalls

Well-Known Member
I'm no expert, but I'd disagree with you on that big bud balls. If the room can dissipate the heat from 20 lamps as fast as it could 1, then yes. That's where the air exchange would come into play. More watts, or voltamps equals more heat.
Well going by what you are saying the 20 bulbs, would be 2000F. That can melt a few metals and bordering on melting steel.

100F 'item' + 100F 'item' = 100F.

Room dissipation doesn't come into play. Thats a different factor and not part of the 'myth busting' All rooms will dissipate heat to some degree or another. Some room dissipate better then others, so how does that factor in? "My 400W is cooler then yours?" j/k LOL

More watts of the same temp = faster rise time, but not a higher temp.
 

MeL1keS2SmOk1e

Active Member
I'm not saying the heat would be exponential by any means, but your saying a 100 watt heater, in the same room, would only get as hot as a 2000 watt heater just faster? Come on dude, your confusing power with temperature. Temperature builds over time. If your room is not capable of exhausting 2000 watts of heat, then it will get hotter than if it only had to exhaust 100 watts.
 

BigBudBalls

Well-Known Member
I'm not saying the heat would be exponential by any means, but your saying a 100 watt heater, in the same room, would only get as hot as a 2000 watt heater just faster? Come on dude, your confusing power with temperature.

No. I said 1 1oow heater would get a room to say 100F,
2 100W heaters would get the same room to the same 100F. Just faster.
Its the same thing man.
The bulbs are in parallel not series.
I'm not confused.
 

MeL1keS2SmOk1e

Active Member
I guess what I'm saying is, if you crack your car windows in the summer, it will stay cooler in your car than if you don't. Same sun, Hotter when you can't exhaust the heat.
 

ststepen420

Well-Known Member
Well what everyone should know is the cops cant kick in your door for that. They cannot get a warrant using infared technologies nor can they get a warrant just by looking at you electric bill. They can however lie and say that someone walked by and smelled it so that is why you take care of the odor and you are good. If the cops kick your door in stating that someone smelled it then when you go to court and your lawyer kicks their ass because you have a sweet carbon filter running and it wasnt possible to smell and proves they got a warrant on false pretense then you walk with a case thrown out of court. Just make sure you cover all of your bases and you'll be fine.
 

MeL1keS2SmOk1e

Active Member
I hear what your saying ststepen420, I was just making the point that temperature builds over time, power doesn't. I didn't mean to step on anyone's toes. I went way off topic any way, great thread by La9
 

ststepen420

Well-Known Member
Oh i wasnt trying to preach or anything, i was just trying to let everyone know some valuable info incase of a bust.
 
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