My idea is simple: as in televisions, laptops, car lighting, led's have faced competition from cold cathode lighting as another source of virtually heatless light that consumes minimal power while providing maximal illumination. And it's cheaper: for 160 Watts of CCFL power with the PSU unit to power the tubes, I paid $150.
The data has been listed once in another thread, but I'll share it again. 40 cold cathode bulbs, 36 red and 4 blue, each emitting 28,000 cd/m2 for a total of 1,200,000 cd in my one sq. meter grow space. The red should emit in the range of 630 nm, the blue around 470 I'm guessing. Considering that the most powerful luxeon led's putting out 500 cd or 500,000 mcd, the numbers for cold cathodes seem ridiculously more cost effective. A single tube is equivalent to a 1W luxeon in price, but might emit many times more light.
I am awaiting the pc power supply, which will be modded to run as a cathode driver, and will consider placing cfl's as white fluoroscent light during flowering, or investing in white cold cathodes if necessary; the 400 W HPS will stay in the holster this time around I think.
If it's true that 1,200,000 cd/m2 is equivalent to the same amount (purely in terms of light, not subject to human sensitivity which sees yellow and green brightest) of lumens, then this could be a great new option for growers.
It should also be said that japanese companies are already selling models of plant propagators for research purposes! That means there is promise in the lighting, that it is just as reliable as LED technology, and can deliver equal lighting for much less money.
Comments are really appreciated, and I would love someone to point out a mistake that would make the complete absence of this technology within this community understandable. I figure that in the worst case, it should perform on par with an LED unit, though I can't see that happening based on my calculations...
The data has been listed once in another thread, but I'll share it again. 40 cold cathode bulbs, 36 red and 4 blue, each emitting 28,000 cd/m2 for a total of 1,200,000 cd in my one sq. meter grow space. The red should emit in the range of 630 nm, the blue around 470 I'm guessing. Considering that the most powerful luxeon led's putting out 500 cd or 500,000 mcd, the numbers for cold cathodes seem ridiculously more cost effective. A single tube is equivalent to a 1W luxeon in price, but might emit many times more light.
I am awaiting the pc power supply, which will be modded to run as a cathode driver, and will consider placing cfl's as white fluoroscent light during flowering, or investing in white cold cathodes if necessary; the 400 W HPS will stay in the holster this time around I think.
If it's true that 1,200,000 cd/m2 is equivalent to the same amount (purely in terms of light, not subject to human sensitivity which sees yellow and green brightest) of lumens, then this could be a great new option for growers.
It should also be said that japanese companies are already selling models of plant propagators for research purposes! That means there is promise in the lighting, that it is just as reliable as LED technology, and can deliver equal lighting for much less money.
Comments are really appreciated, and I would love someone to point out a mistake that would make the complete absence of this technology within this community understandable. I figure that in the worst case, it should perform on par with an LED unit, though I can't see that happening based on my calculations...
