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  #11  
Old 09-16-2018, 06:23 PM
Nexogen Nexogen is offline
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Originally Posted by Ellen H View Post
Super bright and cool are what I'm looking for...whatever works best for the plant's growth and flowering.

My SO is a Physics professor...I love him and his enthusiasm for the subject but I glaze over after just a couple of minutes of his "explaining"

---------- Post added at 03:03 PM ---------- Previous post was at 03:00 PM ----------



Ok. So it has a big spike of blue which I understand is more for vegetative growth, right? I'd also need a bulb with more red spectrum for flowering?

---------- Post added at 03:04 PM ---------- Previous post was at 03:03 PM ----------

Sorry folks, I'm really messing up the "reply" to specific posters. Sorry for any confusion.
I was referring to "Amazon.com : LED 2' T5 6500K Tube : Garden & Outdoor"
Values are taken from what the site says. I just made a joke.

---------- Post added at 06:23 PM ---------- Previous post was at 05:49 PM ----------

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Originally Posted by wisdomseeker View Post
By no means am I trying to start a pissing contest, but I'm a bit confused with your post. 6500K refers to kelvin temperature (sometimes referred to as CCT or correlated color temperature), not spectrum. Science jargon aside: kelvin is loosely used in lighting as an overall measurement for the color temperature of light (sort of like an indicator of the perceived color of a light source). The higher the temperature (K), the bluer the light will appear. The lower the temperature, the warmer the light will appear (more red). Color temperature (K) has little to do with spectrum. You can calculate kelvin (K) from spectrum, but you cannot know spectrum based on kelvin.

A kelvin number (6500k as an example) means there is a strong emission line at that frequency. Kelvin temperature consists of almost an infinite number of wavelengths to produce a perceived color. Different spectral emission patterns (nanometer wavelengths) can produce light of similar color (example: 6500K).



A really good point. I like to use light that is beneficial for my plants, but also want light that appeals to "my eye". Unfortunately, some of the LED 'grow lights' consist heavily of blue/red light. Maybe okay (or maybe better than okay for plants) but sure the 'heck' does not look good to my "eye". I personally like to look at my plants under a white light (with a touch of warmth). Many of the LED 'grow lights' with good spectrum and a high CRI (color rendering index) will produce a nice white-colored light in appearance, and it really does justice to both the leaves & flowers of the plant ~ within the 'eye' of the beholder.



The tried and true mix of 3500k & 6500K has worked for many people for a long time. Opinions will vary (vastly) in regards to your questions about "full spectrum", specific kelvin temperatures, and what's "best" for growing orchids.
My friend, what I showed in that 6500K.jpg is exactly the spectrum of light emitted by that 6500K LED from Amazon.com: LED 2 'T5 6500K Tube: Garden & Outdoor. No joke. The problem is that 1400Lumen/24W = 58.33. That's the idea! It's a joke... It is the most inefficient LED light source.
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  #12  
Old 09-16-2018, 08:17 PM
wisdomseeker wisdomseeker is offline
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Gotcha! Thanks for the clarification. I did not know that you were referring to a particular light tube. All 'eye' could focus on was "With 6500K, that is the spectrum represented in the figure below".

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That's the idea! It's a joke...
How does a hurricane see? With its eye.
~Cheers
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  #13  
Old 09-16-2018, 10:09 PM
Ellen H Ellen H is offline
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Originally Posted by Ray View Post
Anecdotally, plain old warm white seems to be adequate.

So do you think the office/warehouse type of T5 LED's would work to grow plants? They are vastly cheaper than bulbs marketed as "grow lights". But most of them, although they may say "full spectrum" on the spec sheet don't mention PAR values.

Grow light bulbs that put out 50-60 lumens/watt are grossly inefficient; even some of the cheapest white lamps put out in excess of 100-120.

Finding retrofit lamps to replace the T5's might be aesthetically best, but might be pretty costly. As I'll be moving to lights over this winter, I'll likely invest in several of the Cree floodlights available from Home Depot.
This is what I'm finding. Very expensive to replace with the retrofit lamps. I guess I could set aside the ballasts and try something simpler. How many of these Cree floods do you think would adequately light each 2x4' shelf of my Home Depot chrome wire stand? I noticed they come in different Kelvin ratings also.

---------- Post added at 10:09 PM ---------- Previous post was at 09:53 PM ----------

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Originally Posted by wisdomseeker View Post
A couple of questions.

What brand of T5HO fluorescent fixtures are you presently using (4ft bulbs? reflectors? type of ballast)?
Brand/cost of tubes you are using now?
Is plant growth and flowering favorable using your existing fixtures/bulbs?

The reason I ask about the type of ballasts used is because most "direct drop-in" LED replacement tubes (aka: "plug & play" or "ballast compatible") usually only work with electronic/instant start/programmed start ballasts.

Lighting can definitely be an extremely complex subject ~ and can definitely be difficult to explain and support. It can also become confusing when technical terms are thrown into the mix (watts, lumens. lux, foot-candles, PAR, PPF, PPD, *efficacy*). Just an opinion for what it's worth... I believe a better way to evaluate light, when applied to plants, is to know the type of light needed to support photosynthesis in plant life (especially understanding the parts of the light spectrum most useful for plants).

So on that note... most good quality light manufacturers provide data and graphs for their products: PAR (photosynthetic active radiation - basically light needed to encourage photosynthesis), PPF (photosynthetic photon flux - basically a measurement of the total amount of PAR that is produced by a lighting system each second), spectrum analysis, and *efficacy*. The "Active Grow" LED tube you mentioned does just that, and the specs look pretty good
https://activegrowled.com/wp-content...Data-Sheet.pdf

Why is *efficacy* useful? Calculating efficacy of a light source will give you an idea of the amount of electricity used compared to the light produced. The higher the efficacy, the more money you will save on your electrical bill. Efficacy = luminous flux/power (Lm/W). The "Active Grow" 4ft. tube is 24W. A typical 4ft. T5HO fluorescent tube is around 54W with an efficacy of around 100 lumens per watt (Lm/W). As to spectral data for a T5HO fluorescent tube, I really like the "Hortilux" PowerVEG PowerVEG FS+UV | EYE Hortilux

Something to seriously ponder if you decide to go with the direct drop-in LED tubes (especially when trying to cut costs with buying 12 tubes)... a mix of these: 5000k T5 LED Tube - 25.5W - 5000K - TCP L25T5D5050K and 3500K T5 LED Tube - 25.5W - 3500K - LifeBulb LBT5F3335B could work for your purposes. As good as the others you mentioned? Maybe, maybe not > might be worth a try.
So I had a look at these...if my math is correct, the efficacy of the 5000K ones is about 138. Seems good right? I just have no idea from the spec sheet how to gauge whether or not it will provide usable light for the plants.

The Hortilux looks pretty cool. They are the only one I've seen that mention the importance of UV light for the plants and I guess their bulbs supply both UVA and UVB. Is there a real benefit of UV light for the plants?
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  #14  
Old 09-17-2018, 05:03 AM
wisdomseeker wisdomseeker is offline
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Originally Posted by Ellen H View Post
So I had a look at these...if my math is correct, the efficacy of the 5000K ones is about 138. Seems good right? I just have no idea from the spec sheet how to gauge whether or not it will provide usable light for the plants.

The Hortilux looks pretty cool. They are the only one I've seen that mention the importance of UV light for the plants and I guess their bulbs supply both UVA and UVB. Is there a real benefit of UV light for the plants?
They should provide plenty of usable light for your plants. 138lm/w is not bad... the 6400K T5HO SunBlaster florescent tubes are around 93lm/w, and the 4ft. SunBlaster 6400K LED strip is 100.2lm/w (according to their website).

In regards to your question about real benefits of UV light for plants: debatable. UVA and UVB are not that photosynthetically active, but when included into the spectrum of artificial light it becomes more similar to the light of the sun. Valid studies have shown increases of leaf size/leaf area (for basil, beets, leaf lettuce, pak choi, and peppermint) in experiments using supplemental UVA light. Soybeans also had more branching and less stretching. One particular study especially caught my attention > when kale was exposed to supplemental UV light, the outer sides of its leaves (epidermis) thickened, making it more difficult for fungal infections to penetrate the leaves and effect the plant. For a deeper dive into some reading about the role of UVB and plants The Role of Uv-B Radiation in Aquatic and Terrestrial Ecosystems – an Experimental and Functional Analysis of the Evolution of Uv-Absorbing Compounds | Request PDF

A couple of graphs (that I like to use) pertaining to light & spectrum



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  #15  
Old 09-17-2018, 08:39 AM
Ellen H Ellen H is offline
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This is great info. Thank you wisdomseeker!
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  #16  
Old 09-17-2018, 09:19 AM
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The color temperature of white LEDs and fluorescent lamps is of little concern, as it is a correlated or corrected color temperature. In other words, it is correlated to look like that color temperature to the human eye, which has very little to do with what the plants get. Both types of lamps use blue or UV light to excite a phosphor that emits light in a series of peaks, not a continuous spectrum.

The bottom line is get the most wattage you can; the other parameters are secondary.

When comparing lamps of equal wattage, I recommend getting the one that is most efficient, i.e., lumens output, and in a tie with that, the one with the higher color rendition index (CRI).

As to "how many do I need", I don't think anyone can answer that directly, as it depends upon the size of the area, it's shape, the types of plants to be illuminated, the spread of the lamp, and the distance from the lamps to the plants. I am usually one to overdo everything, but for my 1' x 4' benches, I'll likely start with three of the 18 watt Cree floodlights, suspended about 24" above the phalaenopsis plants. If I see they are getting too dark, I'll simply lower them - in small increments, so I don't burn them.
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  #17  
Old 09-17-2018, 07:55 PM
Ellen H Ellen H is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ray View Post
The color temperature of white LEDs and fluorescent lamps is of little concern, as it is a correlated or corrected color temperature. In other words, it is correlated to look like that color temperature to the human eye, which has very little to do with what the plants get. Both types of lamps use blue or UV light to excite a phosphor that emits light in a series of peaks, not a continuous spectrum.

The bottom line is get the most wattage you can; the other parameters are secondary.

When comparing lamps of equal wattage, I recommend getting the one that is most efficient, i.e., lumens output, and in a tie with that, the one with the higher color rendition index (CRI).

As to "how many do I need", I don't think anyone can answer that directly, as it depends upon the size of the area, it's shape, the types of plants to be illuminated, the spread of the lamp, and the distance from the lamps to the plants. I am usually one to overdo everything, but for my 1' x 4' benches, I'll likely start with three of the 18 watt Cree floodlights, suspended about 24" above the phalaenopsis plants. If I see they are getting too dark, I'll simply lower them - in small increments, so I don't burn them.
Thank you Ray. If I go with the Crees I'll have to reconfigure my shelving to allow more space. There's a significant cost savings with Crees vs. grow light LEDs. The office/warehouse LEDs seem like good lamps as well.
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  #18  
Old 04-02-2019, 10:12 PM
dshallpost dshallpost is offline
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I have the Active Grow LED's -- four 48 inch long fixtures with 4 bulbs in each. My cattleyas are flowering and I am very happy with the set up. I have them in an enclosed small room that used to be a sauna so I can control temp and humidity easily with fans and water in trays. One thing that surprised me is that these lights put out a fair amount of heat. With the lamps on about 14 hours a day, the room stays about 75- 80 degrees in winter (it would otherwise be about 60). In summer I have to be careful not to over heat -- even with fans running 24/7. This set up with T5 would have been an inferno. Very glad I went with the LED's.
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  #19  
Old 04-03-2019, 08:53 AM
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One thing that surprised me is that these lights put out a fair amount of heat.
All lamps generate heat, just differently.

►With incandescent lamps, heat is what generates the light.

►In fluorescents, heat causes the mercury vapor within the tube to ionize, emitting UV that excites the phosphors into emitting visible light.

►With LEDs, the light emitting diode doesn't generate much heat at all, but the driver that powers them does. Fortunately, technology is improving that, tipping the balance so that more energy goes to light than to heat. A few years ago, 50 lumens/watt was a good LED. Now the run-of-the-mill ones deliver 100, with some reaching significantly more than that - I've seen some Cree chips that push 150.
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  #20  
Old 04-28-2019, 12:54 PM
emmajs243 emmajs243 is offline
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Hey! Dshallpost!!!

How big of a space are your lights covering from what distance???

I TOTALLY looked at these MONTHS ago and I contacted them asking if they thought it would be enough or how many bulbs I would need for a 1.5x4" area and they told me they didn't think they would be adequate even for SUPPLEMENTAL light and then suggested something like 5 times the price....Ya, I however did not know enough to be able to tell if it was them trying to just up sells or what. Very happy to hear your catts have been fine on these...I may need to give them a second look...
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