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    Back after a year and alot has been learned! New lights!

    Well i finally went in on new lights after having a miserable summer with the heat from a HPS/MH light. i went with the ArgoLed Sun 411 veg and bloom lights 1 veg 2 bloom. 1500 on lights more than i spent on my whole setup last year. also got new filter ducting filter box and a lot more but it should be a good summer also picking up a portable sealed system portable a/c 10k btu. i have had 6 grows with in this last year some better than others but bud quality was always amazing! =D anyway just wanted to show my new stuff!

    #2
    Bad ass setup. Good luck!
    Current Grow
    Power Plant | 2x2x4 Tent | FFOF Soil | BP Cal-Mag | FF Trio Nutes | 300 LED | Temp R/H Gauge | Humidifier | Fans | 2 Gallon Smart Pot | 4' 190 CFM/Speed Controller | 4' Carbon | Passive Intake

    Comment


    • Inuart88
      Inuart88 commented
      Editing a comment
      Thank you its about time to upgrade the wife will want to kill me but hey if it saves me a head ache im alright with that

    #3
    Also if you are looking in to led lights one of the more important information on the lights is the PPF. for veg you want 400-600 ppf and for flower between 600-900 ppf those bloom lights land at 414 each so total 828 which is close to the max out. When you hit 1000ppf the plants will not take any more till you add c02.

    Comment


    • ZigZag
      ZigZag commented
      Editing a comment
      Yup, thats what I've found too. I adjust the output on the lights I have so they put out the suggested PPFD for various stages of development.

    • Inuart88
      Inuart88 commented
      Editing a comment
      in what i have read the 400-600 range growth is between 50-85% Less Growth rate than the 600-900 range but you cannot double the growth rate at a 100% or something i cant remeber i found it interesting https://fluence.science/science/par-ppf-ppfd-dli/ article i found

    #4
    Welcome back, 88!! It seems like we are always "tweeking" our grow spaces followed by a bit of a learning curve with new systems!! Good luck and keep us posted!!!
    DIY grow space 2.5' X 3.5' X 6.5'
    315 LEC
    6" Vortex exhaust fan w/speed control
    6" Carbon filter
    3- 6" fans
    humidifier
    temp and humidity gauge
    5 gal smart pots w/ FFOF soil
    FF trio nutrients

    Comment


    • Inuart88
      Inuart88 commented
      Editing a comment
      thank you happy to be back and show you guys what i learned over this year and it was alot only way to learn is to make mistakes and i did alot of that. so upgrading my lights and everything in between is fixing the stuff i learned this year and save me some $$ on my electric bill

    #5
    Wahoo you ARE BACK and looking very slick! How big is the tent? So wonderfully fresh. Delighted for you😊😊😊😊😊
    Indoor- Coco coir & Perlite - 5 gal Smart pots
    Veg-T5s Flower- Platinum LEDS
    GH Flora Trio Cali-mag, Terpinator Liquid Bloom
    photoperiod feminized seeds
    http://www.growweedeasy.com/sites/gr...ow-journal.pdf
    http://www.growweedeasy.com/sites/gr...o-May-2017.pdf
    http://www.growweedeasy.com/sites/gr...ow-Journal.pdf

    Testing for the_honeysticks genetics

    Comment


    • Inuart88
      Inuart88 commented
      Editing a comment
      4x4x7s got 2 one veg and flower. Upgrading from a 600watt hps/mh never felt SO GOOOOOD! got some new strains too Firstblood, Sly Pie Exress and Dr.fire which is a cross seed i made =D so those 3 new kinds are exciting been stuck on C99 Fire OG Jack and Mystery White for a long time so im excited to get some new stuff coming in also. Didn't you upgrade to leds? did you like them? The agro suns have only been out since November so i couldn't find shit on em before i bought em but i like what i see.

    • Tika
      Tika commented
      Editing a comment
      Yes I made the change to LEDs a while back. I love them. They still generate some heat by their cooling fans but nowhere the heat issue of HP's. And! My plants like them a lot! Very perky. I still veg under T5s.
      Great new set up(S)!!!! Congratulations🍾🍾🎩

    • Inuart88
      Inuart88 commented
      Editing a comment
      The technology has changed in the year i started growing. im so impressed with leds now never thought i would switch. Alot of the leds there was were like the platinum you have the box style type Kind led etc. my local hydro store doesn't even carry those anymore. The technology was like that for so long im impressed to see where it has gone i almost bought the spyder X plus but ehhh im not dropping 1500 on one light. Its really headed in the right direction.

    #6
    Originally posted by Inuart88 View Post
    Also if you are looking in to led lights one of the more important information on the lights is the PPF. for veg you want 400-600 ppf and for flower between 600-900 ppf those bloom lights land at 414 each so total 828 which is close to the max out. When you hit 1000ppf the plants will not take any more till you add c02.
    Not far off, though there is really no need to change light intensity between full vegetation and flowering. 500-700umols is the best range for photosynthetic efficiency. Between 700-1000umol plants quantum yield or photosynthetic efficiency really starts to decline as they become Co2 limited. Above 1000umols as you say, they have reached the saturation point, where any further light increase does not increase photosynthesis and can actually reduce it if photoinhibition occurs.

    If all or most light reaches the plant canopy, light height does not provide more energy to plants. You only change the distribution characteristics as light does not degrade through space, it merely radiates and density reduces with respect to the observer.
    Written Articles:
    Light Metric Systems
    Using Light Efficiently
    The Light Cycle Debate
    Environment Conditions
    Grow Light Technologies
    How To Compare Grow Lights
    To Defoliate Or Not To Defoliate
    Having A Light Source Too Close

    Check Out Our Social Media Channels For More Resources:
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    Comment


    • Inuart88
      Inuart88 commented
      Editing a comment
      Yeah i just started learning about this yesterday lol after the company for the lights called me to explain these light stats to me since i used lumens with my old 600watt to judge goodness i guess i dont know its what i learned early on in growing. Now that i have made the switch from the mh/hps learning what makes an led good is different i tried asking guys at grow store and they new shit about leds which was surprising because they have always been well versed but after talking to the company lumens doesn't matter that is the light to the human eye of how bright it is. i was told about the spectrum which i new about but they knew nothing about ppf or how much ppf you would need for ur desired grow space. also using Mylar aka reflective walling increases ppfd by 10-20% . But i got 25% off my order at the grow store i didnt go in there fucking around i said whats the best deal you can give me if i buy 3 of these today and i wanted 20% he said 25% i shut my mouth and his manager railed him a new one. then he tried to get me to buy one today and get the other 2 tomorrow since they didn't have them in-stock i said i will pay for everything now and you order Monday. so i got a light for free =D the reds were 530 before 25% and the blue 460 i got all 3 for 1050 lol and i got some other stuff 2 but the lights is where the deal was
      Last edited by Inuart88; 04-18-2018, 05:32 PM.

    • DrPhoton
      DrPhoton commented
      Editing a comment
      Haha nice. Yea light manufacturers are surprisingly working off some inaccurate and poor understanding in light physics and plant physiology. I have seen many many products from light manufacturers with advertising that is so off track that i feel like intellectually vomitting. 😅

      Have a look at some of my articles if you want to learn more. 👍

    #7
    Honestly Sunlight supply co. the makers new so much it was insane i was completely surprised when talking to there rep. i asked alot of questions i had about light height and all the other stuff. and got alot of the answers you gave me. i was impressed to say the less. they also emailed me a bunch of materiel pertaining to the light and its specifications and scientific data. now the grow store salesmen couldnt tell his head from his ass but he gave me a hell of a deal

    Comment


    • DrPhoton
      DrPhoton commented
      Editing a comment
      Yes i imagine they would, being so well estabilished in the horticulture market.

    #8
    also one thing i can tell you from my last year of growing air flow and air exchange /HVAC is soooo important its crazy its almost more important than lighting learning things about this subject and how air flow works(think of air as water) and how filtering and cooling/dehumidifying the air is important and a learning curve for someone new to this hobby

    Comment


    • DrPhoton
      DrPhoton commented
      Editing a comment
      Yes i have written an article about the importance of environment conditions. You do have to keep in mind of the environemnt control equipment, if its using too much power then there is a point where controlling environment such as temperature can cost more than it is worth.

    • strainsgrow
      strainsgrow commented
      Editing a comment
      Learned the hard way. I left my exhaust for two days off to test my temps differences and there was mold already forming on my soil the second day . I run it 24/7 now.

    #9
    A while back I condensed some research I did on PPF/PPFD and will attach it here in case anyone is interested.
    I guess I'm technologically inept because I tried to attach a PDF with that info but couldn't get it to take.
    Apologies.
    So I'm going to just paste it below.

    _Photosynthesis is the most important chemical reaction on this planet. Plants use a band of light between 400nm-700nm as a source of energy to make food molecules from CO2 and H20.

    The spectrum of light between 400nm-700nm is defined as PAR_Photosynthetic Active Radiation. Light outside this PAR range is not used by plants for growth. Plants do respond to UV and Infrared light but these extreme wavelengths are utilized more as “triggers” that assist or promote various stages of development such as initial growth and the onset of flowering.

    The lights I use provide a spectrum of 300-800nm so they account for small amounts of light outside the photosynthetic active radiation spectrum. They also provide a full range of green light which is also used by plants in various growth processes.

    Electric light sources convert electrons into photons. Photo-biological reactions measure output with photosynthetic photon flux_ PPF which is a measurement of the total PAR output of a lighting system (basically the amount of specific colors within the range from UV to Infrared_ it isn’t a measurement of the strength of the light reaching your canopy, only the quality of the light).

    PPFD measures how much of that light is delivered to a canopy at a specific distance and a specific area of coverage. PPFD is short for photosynthetic photon flux density. This measurement is expressed as micro moles per meter squared per second_umol/m2/s.
    This is the only real life measurement that tells us how much light is being delivered to a crop canopy enabling photosynthesis.

    Different lights provide variable amounts of PPFD. This is not directly related to the amount of watts a light draws in electrical power, or the strength of individual LED’s.

    For instance the lights I'm using are designed to be used at least 18” from the canopy (not any closer). The manufacturer provides charts that provide the PPFD each of their lights provide at specific distances in six inch squares over a one square meter area. For example my two lights together hung 1 ft from each side of the growing area and one foot apart provide 880 PPFD at 22”, 666 PPFD at 26” and 510 PPFD at 30”. At 48” they provide 260 PPFD.

    Even coverage over the entire canopy and depth of penetration are what really count when determining the sweet spot for your light(s).

    I start using my lights at a height that is close to what PPFD is recommended for specific stages and then lower them a bit at a time so I can match the ideal PPFD. The last three weeks of flowering they are about 20-22” above the canopy. With short plants, less than 20” tall there isn’t much difference between the size of the colas between the top and bottom because almost the entire plant is within the sweet spot.

    For instance when setup 26” above the canopy they provide 666 PPDF over every square inch_ from one side to the other and end to end (no fall off).
    The same setup provides 400 PPFD at 36”. With this information it can be determined that these lights when hung 26” above the canopy will provide 666 PPFD at the canopy and still deliver 400 PPFD 14” below the canopy. This is important to know when trying to determine the best height for your lights at specific stages of development and the sweet spot relative to the depth of penetration.During the last 3-4 weeks of flowering I lower them to about 20”, giving the plants about 700-800 umols/m2/s.

    CANNABIS does best with 100-300 umol/m2/s during the seedling stage.
    300-600 umol/m2/s during the vegetation stage,
    and 600-900 umol/m2/s during flowering.

    Generally the more light you can provide the more photosynthetic activity will result. But at some point a plants response to the amount of light it is receiving will plateau at saturation level. The saturation level can vary depending on the environmental conditions of the grow room.
    When light saturation has reached its limit this can be due to some environmental factor, such as CO2 levels. When temperatures reach over 80 degrees additional CO2 can increase the saturation level, making it possible to obtain higher production at that temperature range.

    I don’t have room for a mechanical CO2 generator, so I just try to get as good an air exchange as I can. I have tried products other than CO2 generators but haven’t known them to make a noticeable difference. Considering the environmental conditions in my grow room I may not even benefit from supplementing CO2 because I keep the temp below 80 degrees F.

    Of course even the best lighting will not guarantee awesome harvests. There are many other environmental conditions for getting the most from your crop_ medium, nutrients, PH, temperature, relative humidity, photoperiod, etc.

    Cheers to all and get growing!

    Current grow_ coco based medium, Fluence LED lights, AIT, 5 gallon planters,
    liquid organic nutrients by Advance Nutrients and Vegamatrix. Strains_ Exodus Cheese (feminized), Meltdown (regular) and Caesar (regular).

    Comment


    • Tika
      Tika commented
      Editing a comment
      Thanks for that effort- great info.

    • Inuart88
      Inuart88 commented
      Editing a comment
      Awesome information lots of learning i need to do with what seems to be new changes to me in the terms of light technology in relative to the lights that are being sold. from what i learned about growing was different from this. (aka the grow boss) terrible information some of it .. AKA light information and how lumens are the most important stat when thinking of lighting that and watts not ppf/ppfd.

    #10


    Originally posted by ZigZag View Post
    The spectrum of light between 400nm-700nm is defined as PAR_Photosynthetic Active Radiation. Light outside this PAR range is not used by plants for growth. Plants do respond to UV and Infrared light but these extreme wavelengths are utilized more as “triggers” that assist or promote various stages of development such as initial growth and the onset of flowering.
    Plants do photosynthesize outside the PAR spectrum, though less efficiently than inside PAR. Both infrared and ultraliolet
    are used for photosynthesis and morphological responses to light.

    Originally posted by ZigZag View Post

    PPFD measures how much of that light is delivered to a canopy at a specific distance and a specific area of coverage. PPFD is short for photosynthetic photon flux density. This measurement is expressed as micro moles per meter squared per second_umol/m2/s.
    This is the only real life measurement that tells us how much light is being delivered to a crop canopy enabling photosynthesis.
    Whats interesting here is that PPFD is not actually measuring in metres squared for electrical lighting and does not represent an actual value of photons reaching the sensor. Ever wondered why you can measure higher PPFD than the total PPF of the fixture you are measuring ?. This is why. Quantum metres were designed for solar radiation and demand uniform light to accurately calculate a metres squared value. But we use it as a spot reference for the diameter of the sensor rather than a technically accurate metric.


    Originally posted by ZigZag View Post
    CANNABIS does best with 100-300 umol/m2/s during the seedling stage.
    300-600 umol/m2/s during the vegetation stage,
    and 600-900 umol/m2/s during flowering.
    Plants actually are most efficient between 500-700umols. Between 700-1000umols photosynthetic efficiency really starts to drop. With anything over 1000umols not adding anything to photosynthesis except heat. Although younger plants do benefit from less light intensity, there really is no need to change the light height between vegetation and flowering. Its best to stay between 500-700umols for optimal efficiency.

    Light height again does not provide more energy to plants where the entire canopy is filled.

    For the most part your understanding is pretty good, you might benefit reading my articles on light. Keep learning



    Written Articles:
    Light Metric Systems
    Using Light Efficiently
    The Light Cycle Debate
    Environment Conditions
    Grow Light Technologies
    How To Compare Grow Lights
    To Defoliate Or Not To Defoliate
    Having A Light Source Too Close

    Check Out Our Social Media Channels For More Resources:
    Facebook
    Twitter
    Instagram

    Comment


    • ZigZag
      ZigZag commented
      Editing a comment
      Hey DANGERDAN_ thanks for the additional information! And hey, that post wasn't intended to contradict any of the information you provided, but rather to condense what I've been able to gather from different research projects and personal experience.

      All I know for sure is that the lights I got 3-4 grows ago have produced considerably heavier harvests in the same space with all other factors very similar. They are just too powerful for seedlings so I only use one & have to lower the intensity by raising it or adjusting the output itself. Since different strains seem to respond best to different light levels I watch the seedlings very carefully once they get their heads above the medium. If they appear to be stretching more than I like then I lower the light intensity and if the stems are quite short and the leaves small and dark then I raise them and that seems to make a big difference within a few days at that stage.

      Then as they get going I light up the second and raise the output and/or drop them so they are closer as the plants mature. For most of the grow the canopy is getting between 500-700 umol/s which is in the range you suggest and seems to work best for me too.
      For the last 2-3 weeks they get a bit more on the higher end- in the 700-900 range. This seems to result in a burst of size and density in the buds themselves that I wasn't seeing before. But I do need to watch them carefully so they don't get burned.

      The slight increase in stress is also suppose to increase potency but I have no way to measure that. One of my main concerns at that time is burning up some of the terpenes themselves...so another reason I try to be careful. As a safety measure I try to make sure the temperature range stays between 65-75 F. and that air circulation is adequate to keep the top of the canopy from getting too hot. Fingers crossed! I'm getting close to that time in the present grow.

      We measured the umol/m2/s every 6" across a square meter_ about 36 readings/meter2. The difference between each reading was less than 40 umol/s,..the results seemed to produce larger buds on all the colas, especially ones that were 6-12" shorter than the tallest ones and those on the outside of the space which weren't getting as much light with the first setup...
      I'm certainly not a physicist and could easily be wrong or not completely understand how all these elements add up but having more even light coverage over the entire canopy and one that has better penetration into the canopy produced a significant benefit to how heavy the harvests have been since changing my lighting system.

      The coverage provided by my first lighting system wasn't near as even or provided as much light or as full a spectrum and the harvests weren't nearly as good. When readings were taken with the same devise every 6" squared with that first lighting setup the intensity was constant for the square foot directly below each light but fell off quite a bit when measured out beyond that. The first lights didn't cover my space as efficiently as the ones I have now_ which cover my grow space of 3.5' x 6'.
      These observations included about 11 different strains for whatever that might be worth..?.

      At this point my harvests seem to be effected more by other environmental conditions and I don't feel they can be improved by changing my lighting. Training, the strains selected, medium, temperature, air flow and nutrient levels seem to be the major influencing factors at this point. And of course genetics.

      Unfortunately the device that measures PPFD is too expensive for me to own one but we were lucky enough to borrow one about a year ago from a local commercial grow house supplier. It certainly did provide what seemed to be valuable information to dial in our lighting and was a good learning experience as well. With the first lighting system it appeared the canopy was receiving pretty even light but the meter provided information our eyes alone couldn't discern.Maybe letting us borrow the meter was just a ploy by the supplier to get me to invest in new lights! But I think not, considering the effect they have had.

      One thing I love about growing is that you can experiment on so many different levels to see how different elements affect ones harvests within the constraints of different growing environments. The challenge is trying to get all these factors dialed in for optimum results....and then of course about the time that happens one finds they want a larger or taller area... or both a veg room and a bloom room_ my next objective for certain!

      Thanks for all the information and cheers to new knowledge and awesome grows!

    • DrPhoton
      DrPhoton commented
      Editing a comment
      I certainly admire your pursuit for knowledge  What light and size grow do you have ?

      When you move from 500-700umol to 700-900, is your canopy full or is there space around the canopy where light can pass through. ? Bringing a light closer to prevent radiated losses can help. So taking into consideration these radiated losses and a plants photosynthetic efficiency is key. When a canopy is full and light is not allowed to pass through, bringing a light closer only changes where photons land and so the same total photosynthetic load is recieved.

      Unless light is being wasted through radiated losses, i myself will try aim for 500-700umols.

    • DrPhoton
      DrPhoton commented
      Editing a comment
      I just had a look at your grow and i do see that there are spaces where light can get through, a closer light could be beneficial like in your situation. I am thinking of writing a grow light article.

      Those are nice lights btw

    #11
    DrPhoton ..."Unless light is being wasted through radiated losses, i myself will try aim for 500-700umols"

    How are do you know when you are at 500-700umols? Do you have a meter to measure? If so, what meter? or Go by manufacturer specifications? (Can they be believed?)

    TIA

    Comment


    • DrPhoton
      DrPhoton commented
      Editing a comment
      In my article on grow light proximity i explain how you can convert photometry values such as lux, into quantum values such as umols. This can be done with various light sources as they have been modeled with conversion factors. Monochromatic light sources however cannot be calculated because their spectrums can vary a lot from model to model, so a quantum meter is required.

    #12
    Just found this useful chart to help convert lux to umols.... PPFD Conversion Tables.pdf

    Comment


    • DrPhoton
      DrPhoton commented
      Editing a comment
      Nice 👍

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