Humboldt DWC
Well-Known Member
Whos out there rockin the induction lighting and how its going?
Bad clones about covers it,I'm no longer going to count on someone's sick and abused clones.The Cree bulb flowering thread is the lone survivor.cap what happened to your induction thread? did they not do so well in flower?
I grew with induction for about a day. 150w 2700k bulb got up to 5F hotter than my DIY ~156w PLLs, so I put them back in. Induction looks good and it has its place, but not in my grows any more.
I have my ballast's mounted outside my cabinet to reduce heat.
Yep, same here. Still 5 degrees warmer pushing my canopy to almost 90F. Out she went.
I would say closer to t5s. You basically get 75-80 lumens/watt with PLLs.
I heard that induction lighting the bulbs last for a really long time. The bulbs intensity declines only about 1% every 2 months rather than 30% over that time for HID lighting. I'm about to look up the exact numbers behind it but this is a starting point. Besides that the spectrum is really good as well and they run at very cool temperatures allowing them to be placed closer to your plants than HID lighting.
That sounds like what I heard, if thats the case the savings on bulbs alone would be worth the investment as long as the light spectrums and coverage is figured into your lighting setup.
:Tumbleweeds: lol.
I don't think induction is going to catch on as much as the manufacturers would like.
The problem with induction is that it's still just a florescent light bulb.
There is no penetration. You're still going to get fluffy buds like you would running T-5's.
A 400 watt induction will have NOWHERE near the penetration of a 400 watt HID which means fluffy bud with the induction.
Less heat-Maybe.
Better Bud-No.
More weight-No
If you find something contrary to what I think I'm always open to new shit and would love to hear it.
Peace.
Tav