Should I buy this LED?

Randomblame

Well-Known Member
PPFDvs-growth.png Therefor you can dimm the lights to whatever output you need.
And 400w is not too much for a square meter, it's around 37,4w per sft²!

If you want to go above 1100μMol/s/m² you can damage the leafes. This is called bleeching!
To give your plants the abillity to use such light densities they need a lot of nutrients and additional CO2.
It has been shown that light densities of 700-850μMol/s ppfd provide very good results when it comes to gram per watt.
If you increase your density, let's say from 1000 to 1500μMol/s you need 50% more energy but that will not lead to 50% more profit.
In fact, such intensities are very hard to handle and you should choose better a "safe" range!
As you can see on the 2nd. screenie, a plant with 500μMol/s and 30°c growth as fast as a plant getting 1500μMol/s at 35°C.
 

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thomasrr

Member
View attachment 3985873 Therefor you can dimm the lights to whatever output you need.
And 400w is not too much for a square meter, it's around 37,4w per sft²!

If you want to go above 1100μMol/s/m² you can damage the leafes. This is called bleeching!
To give your plants the abillity to use such light densities they need a lot of nutrients and additional CO2.
It has been shown that light densities of 700-850μMol/s ppfd provide very good results when it comes to gram per watt.
If you increase your density, let's say from 1000 to 1500μMol/s you need 50% more energy but that will not lead to 50% more profit.
In fact, such intensities are very hard to handle and you should choose better a "safe" range!
As you can see on the 2nd. screenie, a plant with 500μMol/s and 30°c growth as fast as a plant getting 1500μMol/s at 35°C.
My plan is to add co2 to the grow to get a bigger yield, and I prefer a 600W light and if the light is too intense I can hang it higher, but 400W will always have a limit.
 
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