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Originally Posted by naoki
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Currently using two, one is a branded one from the UK with built in cooling fan and is a daylight colour, 2yrs gaurantee. The other is a really cheap chinese sourced one, warm white, passive cooling, supposedly cree leds.
They fitted straight into my old envirolite reflectors with E40 fittings so thats part of the reason i wanted to try them.
So dropped from 450w for cfl to 90w led in total (although i have yet to measure it, LED ratings from china are usually erroneous). Payback is around 6 months compared to cfl.
Ill wait and see which colour rating gives the best growth, growing high light loving plants with them, Nepenthes ampullaria and some pyrophytic indochinese nepenthe species.
It takes good lighting to get decent colours on them, so far results are encouraging.
---------- Post added at 03:24 AM ---------- Previous post was at 03:08 AM ----------
Quote:
Originally Posted by kg5
Thank You So Much For Your Comment ALToronto.
It is hard enough trying understand grow lights as a very new person to it all but the.......
I have been a member of 3 other forums for more years than I would like to admit but I got a personal email one time from a new forum member berating me to the max because I spelt "paid" as "payed" . Like get a life!
Really felt very down about starting a thread that went.....
......Back to where I am at! Now my benchmark is grow lights for an aquarium as my example.
Trying to figure out how to tell what any given grow light system power usage is.
I have a light hood that will fit 2 x t5's so I am going to try them out but looking at aquarium grow lights on line I have come across a blue? t5 light or maybe it is to balance the light spectrum.
I am going to try some LED's as well but am trying to keep away from the UFO colours for my niegbours. The red & blue led lights look like headache material for me.
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I know several people who use waterproof T8 flourescent fittings, normal daylight bulbs. They have the advantage of being very cheap to buy, reasonably efficient, very simple to fit and come in a variety of lengths. Fish tank versions tend to be massively overpriced.
There are LED T8s as well, which i have used. They are a bit expensive at present but will probably get cheaper. One option would be just go for T8s and retrofit later, in a few years, with LED versions.
Flourescent bulbs of all types lose efficiency relatively quickly in use and bulb replacement costs should be considered. T8 tubes are dirt cheap.
Blue aquarium lights are to replicate moonlight or just basically make blue fish stand out. Aquarium lights for plant growth tend to be warm white or have a god mix of red/blue and look slightly purpleish. All overpriced in my opinion.