- Q. Which is a better
lamp to grow with MH or HPS; I'm on a limited budget and can only afford
one?
A. I would recommend purchasing the Metal Halide kit,
and when it comes into the bloom stage you purchase an HPS conversion lamp
or a full spectrum MH lamp. If you are only going to use one type of bulb
for flowering and vegetative stages the Sun Master neutral deluxe is an
excellent lamp for both purposes. This will be more economical for setting
up on a limited budget.
- Q. How
long does the average 1000 watt HPS lamp last?
A. On average they burn for 12000 hrs but most
gardeners replace once a year more maximum efficiency from the lamp. The
cost of new bulbs is minor in comparison to yield loss from weakened lamps.
The best way to monitor a bulbs wear is with a light meter. These can be
expensive, any where from $100-$300, but for a larger scale set up it is
wise investment.
- Q. Is it worth the
investment to upgrade to a full spectrum bulb rather than the standard
bulbs?
A. While the standard bulbs perform very well, I have
seen first hand the benefit of full spectrum lamps such as Hortilux,
Solarmax and Sunmaster and can say with confidence these lamps are
definitely worth every penny. But if you are on a limited budget and you buy
the clears you will still get excellent results as they are still a very
high quality lamp. The full spectrum bulbs give you a combination of red and
blue light similar to HPS and MH mixed together which is best for optimum
growth.
- Q. Which Bulb should be
used in the Vegetative stage and which one in the bloom?
A. Use a Lamp with a high output in the blue range of
the spectrum for the vegetative stage and for the flowering stage use a lamp
with a high out put in the red range of the spectrum. During all stages of
growth but especially during the bloom stage plants require a balanced mix
of blue and red for optimal growth.
- Q. Based on Lumen per
watt Ratio what is more efficient to operate, MH or HPS?
A. HPS gives a higher lumen per watt ratio than metal
halide and the bulbs often last up to twice as long. The 600 watt HPS has
the highest lumen per watt ratio of any HID bulb. But for growing MH has a
higher PAR value than HPS but often isn't enough in the red range of the
spectrum, this is why a mix of both is required for optimal growth. Or the
use of full spectrum bulbs is replacing mixing the MH with the HPS. The bulb
manufacturers are doing this for you.
- Q. Can I run a 1000 watt
MH bulb wired up to a socket and just plug it in my wall plug?
A. Absolutely NO, NO and NO!!! You have to use a 1000
watt MH ballast to power this lamp. The power coming out of your wall must
be transformed to usable voltage by the lamp. This is the job of the
ballast.
- Q. What
should my light cycle be for growing indoors?
A. Since plants all have a different requirement of
light that will depend one what type of plants you intend to grow. The best
thing to do would be research the plant you wish to grow and find out its
light requirements. Most gardeners use an 18 hours of light, 6 hours in the
dark cycle for the vegetative stage and a 12 hours of light, 12 hours of the
dark cycle for the blooming stage.
- Q. What is a Lumen?
A. A lumen is a measurement of light. In simpler terms
one lumen is equal to the amount of light that 1 candle will emit on 1
square foot, 1 foot away from the flame. 1 lumen = 1 foot candle
- Q. What is Lux mean?
A. Lux is the metric unit
equal to the amount of light falling on one square meter 1 lumen = 10 lux A
lux is only 1 / 10 th of a lumen
- Q. What is the average
lumen per watt ratio of an HPS and MH?
A. HPS - 140,000 lumens per watt MH - 100,000 lumens
per watt Fluorescent - 83,000 lumens per watt Mercury Vapor - 63,000 lumens
per watt Incandescent - 17,500 lumens per watt
- Q. What is the definition of
PAR?
A. PAR stands for Photosynthetically Active Radiation
- Q.
What is the PAR value?
A. PAR value is the amount of light usable by the
plants
- Q. When the lights are
off what's going on with my plants? Obviously they don't just sleep so what
do they do?
A. In the dark cycle the plant shifts its focus from
leaf production to root production. The leaves transfer extra stored energy
down to the branches and roots. The plants dark cycle is very important. 24
hour light cycles are not the way to go despite radical theories and tests.
- Q. How high should my
lights be from the tops of my plants?
A. The lamp should be 18 - 24 inches away from the
tops. Use an oscillating fan to circulate air on the tops of your plants.
This will help with the removal of heat produced by your lamp and also
deliver fresh air across the undersides of your leaves which are where the
plant breathes in through tiny microscopic pores called Stomata.
- Q. What is the Kelvin
rating on a bulb mean?
A. Kelvin is the unit of measurement expressing color
temperature. Each lamp has an aggregate Kelvin temperature that indicates
the bulbs spectral output. For indoor gardening a bulb with a Kelvin rating
between 3000-6000 will be sufficient
- Q. Can I use a green
light in my grow room in the dark cycle? I've heard that green light won't
wake up my plants?
A. Yes you can use a green light in your grow room.
Plants do not respond to the green range of the spectrum.
- Q. What is a more
efficient reflector to use if my lamp is universal, horizontal or vertical?
A. Definitely horizontal. Horizontal reflectors can
reflect up to 40 % more light back down to the growing area. The light form
a bulb is emitted form the arc tube located in the center of the lamp. If it
is burning in the horizontal position, half of this light is being directed
at the plants while the other half is being reflected back down form the
reflector giving a complete distribution of the light. If the lamp is
burning in the vertical position all of the light goes out the sides and had
to be reflected back down minimalizing the intensity being directed at the
growing area.
- Q. What is a good
application for the parabolic reflector?
A. Parabolic reflectors distribute the light very
evenly but are extremely inefficient in their use of light. They are
excellent for a vegetative crop or for lots of seedlings or cuttings but are
not very good for high yielding crops with high intensity demands.
- Q. Parabolic
reflectors distribute the light very evenly but are extremely inefficient in
their use of light. They are excellent for a vegetative crop or for lots of
seedlings or cuttings but are not very good for high yielding crops with
high intensity demands.
A. Choose the flat white over semi gloss. It reflects
better than the semi gloss. Glossy paint has light absorbing varnish that
does not reflect as well as the flat white does.
- Q. What is a light
mover? Are they beneficial to a grow room?
A. A light mover is a mechanized device used to slowly
move the grow lamps around to achieve maximum efficiency from your lamps.
They come in the form of a 6 foot track which moves the lamp back and forth
slowly, approximately every 10 minutes each way. Sun circles are designed to
rotate the lamps in a slow circular motion above the growing area. These are
both very beneficial to an indoor garden because you can bring the lamps
closer to the plants without burning and the light can get at all angles of
the plant saving the grower from constantly rotating the plants. Light mover
are usually very efficient to operate and can really help with an increase
in yield without the increase in lamps.
- Q. My ballast seems to
operating at a high temperature, but how can I know if it's too hot?
A. The best way to tell if your ballast is running too
hot is to take a wooden kitchen match and touch to the ballast box. If it
ignites the match then it is operating too hot. I would recommend having it
looked at by a professional or have it serviced at your local hydro shop.
- Q. Does the heat coming
off of my ballasts make a big difference in my grow room?
A. Yes if heat is already a problem in your garden then
I would suggest moving your ballasts outside the grow room. Especially if
there is more than 1. They can really increase the overall room temperature.
- Q. What is the most
efficient lamp to operate?
A. The 600 watt HPS is the most efficient High
Intensity Discharge lamp to operate to date. It has the highest lumen per
watt ratio of any of the HID lamps on the market.
- Q. What is the best
position to have my ballasts in?
A. If the ballast is mounted in a protective housing
(ballast box) then it should be kept up off the ground. Milk crates or
cement blocks are excellent for this. Place a piece of heat resistant rubber
under the box to reduce any vibrations the box may give off. They can
sometimes really hum and that can get irritating. I suggest having all
ballasts mounted in proper casings. Un- protected ballasts are usually
trouble waiting to happen.
- Q. Is it better to have
bigger taller tomato plants or short and bushy?
A. For an indoor garden the shorter bushy plant would
be the way to go. The taller a plant is the more energy it wastes to move
waters and sugars back and forth within itself between the roots and the
leaves. Tall plants often need to be staked up while the shorter plants are
usually much heartier and can support their own weight. If you have a green
house and can tie your plants up then the sky is the limit but for indoors
go with a shorter stalker plant.
- Q. Is it good to trim
the bottom shoots off of the plant and leave the tops?
A. An untrimmed plant can cause itself to waste energy
to supply the useless shoots on the bottom often referred to as sucker.
Carefully remove the unwanted bottom suckers but leave on as many good green
leaves as possible.
- Q. Is it a good idea to
strip some of my plants leaves so the flowers get more light?
A. No. Your leaves are what take in the light and use
it for photosynthesis not the flowers so leave the leaves on unless they are
50% or more damaged or yellow. The leaves are very important to your plant
and removing them only slows down photosynthesis and reduces growth rate.
- Q. Is
vitamin B-1 good for the plants?
A. Yes. Vitamin b-1 stabilizes the plants chemistry
very well while also acting as a catalyst which helps make all the enzymes
in the plant work their chemistry smoothly. Different manufacturers all
create their own blend of B-1 containing other vitamins and hormones to give
them their own unique vitamin b-1. B-1 is often used to treat plant stress
and during transplanting to help with the shock. It is also excellent to use
as a foliar spray.
- Q. What is the purpose
of the leaves on a plant?
A. The leaves are basically sugar factories for the
plant. They act as a solar panel taking in the light combining it with water
and C02 to make usable sugars. Then they send these sugars down to the roots
when the roots combine these sugars with oxygen it converts it into usable
energy for the plant. The more oxygen to the roots, the more energy it can
transfer to the plant.
- Q. If my plants got too
tall, what can I do to get them down to size?
A. You can cut them back from the top but you have to
cut in a manner that you always leave lots of new shoots available to come
out. If you cut away all of your shoots you lose all potential new growth.
- Q. I
have tomato seedlings under a fluorescent light and was wondering what my
light cycle should be?
A. The light cycle should be at 18 hours of light and
12 hours of darkness. This will be best for optimal growth and will help
keep the seedlings stocky and short rather than elongated and weak. The
plant needs to sleep. This is where it goes from leaf production in the day
to root production at night.
- Q. How important is it to have
the lights at the right height from the plants?
A. Having your lights too far can decrease your yield
significantly. Light intensity virtually doubles every 6 inches closer the
light is to the plant
- Q. How important are
reflectors?
A. Reflectors increase available light by more than
30%. The proper hood over the lamp and reflective materials on the wall can
double the growing area. Growers who use the most efficient reflectors can
harvest up to twice as much as those who hang the lamp with no reflector.
- Q. Are parabolic
reflectors good for a veg room?
A. When growing plants in the veg stage and growing
clones parabolics are perfect. They are somewhat inefficient in their use of
light for blooming but for vegetative stage they distribute the light over a
much larger space which provides even growth for the plant.
- Q.
What is an air-cooled reflector?
A. There are several air cooled reflectors on the
market today. Some use a reflective hood with protective glass face and fans
to move the heat the bulb produces through the hood and out the ducting
system. Most people vent the heat through a carbon filter before discharging
the air out of the house.
- Q. What kind of paint
should I paint my grow room with? Glossy or Flat?
A. Flat white paint contains little or o light
absorbing pigment, therefore flat white paint absorbs virtually no light, it
is almost all reflected. Flat white is whiter than gloss white and is a
better reflectant. Glossy white is manufactured with more light absorbing
varnish. The glossy surface lends itself to bright spots and glare. Flat
white contains less Varnish and inhibits the path of reflective light much
less. It also has a mat texture actually providing a more reflective
surface.
- Q. Are light movers any
good? Is it a worth while investment for my garden?
A. The most efficient way to replicate the movement of
the sun through the sky is with a light mover. A light mover is a device
that moves the lamps back and forth across the ceiling of the grow room.
Motorized light movers replicate the suns path through the sky even though
it does not constantly move east to west. The linear path distributes light
evenly. The slower the light mover moves the lights down the track the
better.
- Q. Is it okay to hang
my ballasts raw from strapping from the ceiling?
A. No!!!! This is the stupidest thing that indoor
gardeners can do. This is a total fire hazard and just all around plain
DUMB. Don’t be cheap. Store ballasts properly in ballast boxes. It’s not
worth burning your house down to save $20.
- Q. My bulb is really
tight to get into the socket. It is really hard to thread in. What can I do
to help this?
A. You can put a bit if Vaseline on the bulb end to
help it slide in easier. Be careful not to cross thread the bulb.
- Q. I have a Honda 5500
watt generator and I am wondering how many 1000 watt grow lamps I can
operate from this particular generator?
A. You could run 4 1000 watt lamps from this generator.
Usually for Honda generators you can count on 1300 watts being needed per
1000 watt lamp so 4 X 1300 equals 5200 watts so you can run 4 lights.
- Q. What kind of
generator is better? Gas or Diesel?
A. Deisel motors are more
economical to run but they are noisy and produce allot of fumes. If you run
a generator be sure it is properly vented or you may not wake up.
- Q. What kind of timer
do I need to run a 1000 watt HPS lamp?
A. Purchase a heavy duty grounded timer. Intermatic
makes the best timers for single lamp operation. Be sure to check the amps
they are rated for as some are different from others.