Attractive, designed grow lights
Login
User Name
Password   


Registration is FREE. Click to become a member of OrchidBoard community
(You're NOT logged in)

menu menu

Sponsor
Donate Now
and become
Forum Supporter.

Attractive, designed grow lights
Many perks!
<...more...>


Sponsor
 

Google


Fauna Top Sites
Register Attractive, designed grow lights Members Attractive, designed grow lights Attractive, designed grow lights Today's PostsAttractive, designed grow lights Attractive, designed grow lights Attractive, designed grow lights
LOG IN/REGISTER TO CLOSE THIS ADVERTISEMENT
Go Back   Orchid Board - Most Complete Orchid Forum on the web ! > >
Reply
 
Thread Tools Rate Thread Display Modes
  #21  
Old 12-11-2014, 03:19 PM
Pokey49 Pokey49 is offline
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Jan 2014
Zone: 7b
Member of:none yet
Location: Grants Pass, Oregon
Posts: 192
Attractive, designed grow lights Male
Default

There are more kinds of light bulbs than Carter has peanuts. I spent45 minutes studying light bulbs in Home Depot trying to find bulbs that would work for my orchids. Information was limited as everything was geared to home lighting use not for growing plants. There was bulbs described as daylight soft light warme light cool light etc. the term "full spectrum" was no where to be found. I finally went with a Philips incandescent Agro flood bulb for plants. 50 watts If that's not the best I can take them back.
Reply With Quote
  #22  
Old 12-11-2014, 03:56 PM
dolfanjack dolfanjack is offline
Member
 

Join Date: May 2011
Zone: 8b
Location: western Oregon
Posts: 30
Attractive, designed grow lights Male
Default

I have found day light cfl's to be the best. I grow carnivorous plants, citrus, and orchids and they all do fine with the day light bulbs. I also prefer the color of light they omit. Jack
Reply With Quote
  #23  
Old 12-11-2014, 04:42 PM
Pokey49 Pokey49 is offline
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Jan 2014
Zone: 7b
Member of:none yet
Location: Grants Pass, Oregon
Posts: 192
Attractive, designed grow lights Male
Default

So if I bought either a cfl Daylight 60/15 watt with > 3000K or a similar LED bulb that would work? Does the term "Daylight" = full spectrum??
Reply With Quote
  #24  
Old 12-16-2014, 09:10 PM
ALToronto ALToronto is offline
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Dec 2012
Posts: 753
Attractive, designed grow lights Female
Default

Neither cfl nor led are full spectrum for any given colour temp. White light cfl (5000 K) are probably closest. I prefer mixing led's of different colour temperatures.
Reply With Quote
  #25  
Old 12-17-2014, 05:26 AM
naoki naoki is offline
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Apr 2012
Zone: 2a
Location: Fairbanks, AK
Posts: 975
Attractive, designed grow lights Male
Default

I did some measurement of light bulbs for another thread. 65W equivalent will give very minimum amount of light at 1 foot away. One of the decent performing bulbs (for plants) is Cree 18W LED Soft White (2700K) from HomeDepot (about $20). It is sold as 100W equivalent, but it gives light required for Paphs and Phals at 1' away (a bit lower than ideal, though) with a reflector. There is 5000K version, which gives the same amount of Photosynthetically Active Radiation (PAR) according to my measurement (I got 83 mircormoles/m^2/s from both bulbs at 1' away). However, in theory, red-shifted 2700K should be more useful for photosynthesis even these two give the same PAR.
Reply With Quote
  #26  
Old 12-17-2014, 12:26 PM
Pokey49 Pokey49 is offline
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Jan 2014
Zone: 7b
Member of:none yet
Location: Grants Pass, Oregon
Posts: 192
Attractive, designed grow lights Male
Default

This light stuff is also baffling. Does not seem there is any consensus on what is a good choice. I ended up, so far, with 9w/60w daylight LEDs with 5000k. The other choices I had at Home Depot were 50w flood Agro/grow lights but they got awfully hot. The only other available choice was 14w/60w cfl daylight. Of the three what do u think is the best choice?

Confused,
Pokey
Reply With Quote
  #27  
Old 12-17-2014, 03:38 PM
naoki naoki is offline
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Apr 2012
Zone: 2a
Location: Fairbanks, AK
Posts: 975
Attractive, designed grow lights Male
Default

Pokey, yes, it could be confusing because biology is complex. If you are interested, there are lots of good informations based on science (but don't trust everything on the web as you probably know).

I'm not sure what is 50w flood agro light. Is it a halogen based flood light or an LED flood? But if you compare the CFL vs LED, I would choose LED. However, there are quite a bit of variation among LED household bulbs. Anon Y Mouse has some comparison posted: Comparative Light Shopping Philips had the highest output in terms of footcandles, and Cree was pretty good, too (note the lower energy consumption). I believe Philips has high output toward the tip (so good for normal reflector), but cree has high output toward the side of the bulb (so good with side reflector). There are also several models of Philips, so you should be careful. The flat one from Philips is not so great according to my measurement (I don't have the model Anon Y Mouse used).

If your 9W 5000K LED is from Cree, I know it is a pretty good one (I used it and I have measured), and it has 10 year warranty. It is the smaller version of what I recommended. You have to place the plants really close (around 6" or less for Paph and Phals) or you need to use lots of them. This is true with small CFL bulbs, too.

But if your condition is far from optimum (e.g. extremely low relative humidity), you may not see much benefit of placing the light close to the plants. The optimum amount of light is environment dependent. In one study of Paph insigne, photosyntesis reached maximum around 100-200 micromoles/m^2/s (Williams et. al 1983 Plant Physiology 72:906-908). Their environment is pretty decent (good temp, good RH).

So Cree 18W from 12' (820 micromoles/m^2/s) is a little lower than the optimum, but it isn't too far off. If you use 9W Cree from 6', you should be getting about 1600 micromoles/m^2/s in theory, so it is a pretty good amount.

This is probably way more information that what you want. Efficiency differences which I'm talking about are probably not so important to some people, and in reality, you can grow orchids with many different light source.

Last edited by naoki; 12-17-2014 at 03:45 PM..
Reply With Quote
  #28  
Old 12-17-2014, 04:01 PM
Pokey49 Pokey49 is offline
Senior Member
 

Join Date: Jan 2014
Zone: 7b
Member of:none yet
Location: Grants Pass, Oregon
Posts: 192
Attractive, designed grow lights Male
Default

Naoki. Yes my led bulbs are Cree 9w60w bulbs. I have them in a 5 headed/fixtures lamp. They are a 5000k bulb. I don't see any easy way to get the lights within 6 inches of all the plants as I have my orchids sitting at multiple tiers. It sounds like I have reasonably good set of led bulbs to work with. I will work the situation and see what happens. I am just wanting to supplement my lighting during these gray winter days. My orchids are I my sun room which has windows in the north east and west with sky lights so think my lighting is pretty good for the most part. I have paphs coming back in bloom and an Angraecum with a new spike forming. My Phals are what have me perplexed. They should be showing some spikes but for whatever reason are not. Everything else (water temps fertilizer humidity) the only I can come up with that they are not spiking is light. Will see what happens in the next couple months. Hoping the extra light is the cats meow.
Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks

Tags
attractive, grow, lights, square, sun, designed


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
grow lights for phals - help me LadySoren Advanced Discussion 27 09-23-2013 11:27 AM
LED grow lights and Phals Orchidhound56 Beginner Discussion 7 09-16-2013 02:47 PM
fluorescent grow lights clusty Advanced Discussion 28 07-22-2013 05:18 PM
LED grow lights chromebright Growing Under Lights 3 02-24-2011 04:32 PM
How I grow Masdevallia's Bolero Pleurothallis Alliance 9 05-25-2010 07:39 AM

All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:15 PM.

© 2007 OrchidBoard.com
Search Engine Optimisation provided by DragonByte SEO v2.0.37 (Lite) - vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2024 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.
Feedback Buttons provided by Advanced Post Thanks / Like (Lite) - vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2024 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.

Clubs vBulletin Plugins by Drive Thru Online, Inc.