ThePundertaker
Member

(Pictured: My tent with the 'alternative' setup, no circulation, vent cooling for light only, and higher RH)
Winters in New England can be very dry. Today our apartment (and my grow tent) hit 10% RH!
I have a 5'x5'x80" grow tent for a 6 x 5gal RDWC with a 5gal reservoir. 5 Nirvana Northern Lights now @ 3 weeks post germination.
- 1kw MH running at 75% (controlled via ballast) in an 'Air Cool Tube' (a sealed light hood), hung halfway down the height of the tent, maybe 3 feet from the plant tops.
- A 240 cfm exhaust fan pulls air through that light hood and out someflexible 6' ducting out the top of the tent.
- Other side of the hood is connected via some flex duct to a carbon filter, which is hung at the top of the tent. Idea being to draw hot air from inside the tent and vent thru the light out the top while opening at bottom of tent draws cooler air in.
- 2 small clip fans provide circulation at the plant height
- I have a little one gallon ultrasonic humidifier sitting in the tent in front of those circulating fans running 24/7. It's like the $40 apartment version you get at Target/Amazon
The outside air being exchanged is my open layout 1 bdrm apartment. The central heat has been off since I started growing, and I've been leaving a couple windows open to keep the apt temp down around 70*F. The downside of this is my apartment stabilizes at the outdoor humidity levels.
With that setup, my tent temp varies between 75-85*F, but the RH has swung between 10-30% RH.
However, I've also tried an alternative setup: Instead of connecting the exhaust fan/light hood to the carbon filter, I just feed the ducting through one of the tent drawstring holes and draw air from outside, using the circulation system only to cool the light.
With that no-vent setup, my little humidifier can do its thing and RH hits 50-60% until I open up my tent door and it rapidly stabilizes with the desertlike hellscape that is Massachusetts in January. However, with the lack of circulation temps in the tent have hit a higher max of 90*F, and hover more often in the 85*F area.
I have read that photosynthesis rates decrease exponentially above 85*F.
I have also read that low RH causes plants to tighten their stomata openings to regulate water loss, which decreases photosynthesis rates.
What do yall think?