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11-27-2015, 06:17 PM
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Join Date: Nov 2014
Zone: 8b
Posts: 73
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Any Advice for How to Choose CFL/LED Lights?
Hi y'all,
I've been looking for information on how to choose lights on this forum and several others and well...it's making my head spin! lol
The only thing I know for sure is that I don't want to use HID lights because of the heat given off. So I know I'm going to use either LED or CFLs, but that's where I'm getting lost.
There are so many options on LEDs, do any of y'all use them? And if so types/brand names & what plants and what distance?
For CFLs...what types do y'all use for your set-up?
Right now I have a large unobstructed east facing window with oncidiums, phalaenopsis, and some others, but I'd like to grow catteleyas, brassias, and vandas if I can supplement the light enough. I know this is a bit off topic, but I would really like to have enough light to grow a very small tomato plant, basically as bright as possible so I that I can grow whatever I want (at least as far the light variable is concerned).
As of right now, I have 4 T8 flourescent tubes screwed in vertically on one of the side walls of my east facing bay window, with my cattleya about 4in or so away.
I've heard that the giant 200w or so CFLs break on arrival, don't last long, etc. I've seen youtube videos DIY cfl fixtures, but I'm really trying to avoid a DIY set-up because I enjoy watering plants much more lol. Also worried about burning down the house.
So I'm slightly leaning towards these 2 options of LEDs...what do you think?
OPTION 1
I'd really have to save for this one, has anyone had experience with this one? I figure one might be enough to grow plenty high light orchids along with my 4 T8's? Or no?
NEW - Diamond Series LEDs - Extreme 3w LED Technology - Advanced LED Grow Lights
OPTION 2:
Then on another forum someone suggested getting PAR38 LED floodlights 250w equivalent:
https://www.1000bulbs.com/category/l...38-250w-equal/
I'm guess I would need at least 2 of these, one at 6500 and one at 2700k. This would be considerably less expensive so I could therefore get it sooner, but not sure what the pros and cons would be between the two of these?
Lastly, if there are any resources, ebooks, books, youtube channel, websites, etc that y'all would recommend for growing under lights I would SUPER appreciate it! I'm trying really hard to learn everything I can but most of what I've read is either very very basic ("plants need red and blue light wavelengths") or way too technical for me to hope to understand.
Last edited by Plantcrazed101; 11-27-2015 at 06:19 PM..
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11-27-2015, 11:03 PM
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Join Date: Nov 2014
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Thanks Leafmite!
Any pros or cons that you've noticed with the t5s? What are you growing under them? What distance from the plants?
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11-27-2015, 11:22 PM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Apr 2012
Zone: 2a
Location: Fairbanks, AK
Posts: 975
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Advanced LED uses "old" technology (in the quickly moving LED world), and I wouldn't pay that much money for it (if you care about the efficiency). The PAR38 is only 97 lumen/watt, which was OK (better than T5HO or T8 florescent light (around 90 lm/W). CFL is worse than linear fluorescent in general. I haven't seen a PAR38 LED with decent efficiency (this is partly due to the design limitation where the heat can't be released efficiency).
If you are tight in budget, there is this option (105lm/W):
4-foot LED Shoplight - Sam's Club
If you can find 12W version of Philip InstantFit T8LED from Home Depot, you can get 133lm/W. But they seem to be discontinued or something, and replaced with less efficient models.
With LED, it is either you pay more in the beginning, or later to the electricity (due to lower efficiency). Here are a couple options with good efficiency (could be considered expensive, but fairly reasonable):
Home / Area 51 LED
Full Spectrum LED Plant Grow Lights | BML Horticulture
In this page, I have links to the 2 other company which uses similar COB technology as Area 51 (see the 2nd paragraph). If you are a little handy, DIY is the way to go (you said that you don't want to). You can make something similar to A51 in 1/2-1/3 of the cost.
Last edited by naoki; 11-27-2015 at 11:29 PM..
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11-28-2015, 12:32 AM
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Join Date: Sep 2010
Zone: 5b
Location: Ohio
Posts: 10,953
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Under the Sun Blaze:
Gardenias, coffee, small figs, citrus trio, a camellia and a Piper nigrum...and the large Oncidium that doesn't fit anywhere else (my windows are pretty full and it is too large to fit under the lights).
Under the Envirogros are most of my orchid collection as well as the Butterworts. Off to the side of the shelf are the Phals, Den Microchip and the Pleuros (low light orchids). Directly under the lights are all the high to medium light orchids (smaller Cattleyas, Angraecums, some Dendrobiums, Neos, etc. (I collected fragrant orchids for a time). The first year, I had the lights too close to the plants and I didn't water often enough so I lost a few. I moved the shelves while the plants were outside for the summer.
I still have plenty of plants and a few orchids in the windows.
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I decorate in green!
Last edited by Leafmite; 11-28-2015 at 12:35 AM..
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11-28-2015, 02:38 AM
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Join Date: Jun 2015
Zone: 9b
Location: Phoenix AZ - Lower Sonoran Desert
Posts: 18,644
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If you're starting out with lights you really should investigate LED further and use that. You can burn plants with incandescent and T5 lights; this is not likely with the others. Look at it this way: Cannabis growers are switching over to LED lights, and they are very focused on getting the most money for their investment.
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11-29-2015, 01:24 PM
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Join Date: Nov 2014
Zone: 8b
Posts: 73
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Thanks y'all!
Naoki...what about this? Is this the "old" LED technology as well?
It's the earthled LED that fits in a regular socket:
https://www.earthled.com/collections...grow-led-light
I looked into that options you suggested, I saw the BML horticulture light bars...but not sure how much buying just one of them would cover? Or if I would need multiples of them? I'll probably call them but I know their goal is to sell so not sure how objective the info is.
For the area 51...they are sold out of everything/don't seem to have much info on their products...
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11-30-2015, 01:24 AM
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Join Date: Apr 2012
Zone: 2a
Location: Fairbanks, AK
Posts: 975
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Nice find! That one from Lighting Science group (LSG) is really good. LSG is the company which makes the top rated LED fixture in this independent test. The broad spectrum model produces 21.70 micromol/s from 13W (= 1.67 micromol/J). So this is at the top end in terms of efficiency. It is fairly expensive, but it is a good one if you can afford it.
It appears that they are having a black friday sale for this ($99 for 4) today:
https://www.lsgc.com/products/black-...ant=8978702661
It is 40 degree beam angle. So you'll need quite a bit of distance. At 24", it gives 150micomol/m^2/s, so it is pretty decent for Cattleya level (I would go a little closer, but it may be enough). The diameter of the covered area is around 16" at this distance. For Phal level, between 2-3' is good.
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11-30-2015, 01:33 PM
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Join Date: Nov 2014
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Sweet! Wow you know so much thanks Naoki! Where did you learn all this stuff? If you wrote a "growing under lights" ebook I would totally buy it.
I didn't see that deal thanks for pointing that out... hmmm this is quite tempting...
How close do you think the light would need to be to grow a Vanda or Encyclia or other really high light orchid? Or do they need the same light as Cattleya? What about a tomato plant or cactus?
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11-30-2015, 03:04 PM
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Join Date: Apr 2012
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Location: Fairbanks, AK
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I've been learning about it from books, scientific literature, and MJ forums. I'm a professional biologist (plant physiology is not my field, though), so maybe I have a little advantage in understanding the primary literatures! With the forum, you need to filter out the noise from the signals, but a lot of knowledgeable people in this forum.
I've never grown Vanda, but maybe slightly less than 24" (leaf-to-light) may be a good start. I have only 1 species of Encyclia, and it's growing well under the Cattleya condition. It's a large genus (and I'm not so familiar with them), so hopefully others probably can make a recommendation.
Full sun at the noon time is about 2000micromol/m^2/s of PPFD. I'm guessing that you want close to 700 micromol/m^2/s. So I have a feeling that this light is not so appropriate for tomatoes or cacti. If you use 2-4 of these light to cover 1 sq.ft or so, it may be possible. But for those, I'm guessing that HPS or DIY Chip-on-board (COB) LED (something similar to the one described in my blog link I gave you earlier) is much more economical since you'll need lots of power.
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light, yall, grow, lights, plants, cfls, leds, set-up, facing, options, window, diy, east, youtube, forum, lol, choose, led, 250w, equivalent, considerably, suggested, 2700k, par38, guess |
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