DeadlyFoez
Active member
TO ALL NEWBS, PLEASE READ THE WHOLE THREAD BEFORE POSTING YOUR QUESTIONS THAT MAY HAVE ALREADY BEEN ANSWERED. thank you.
Hey folks. I have created this thread for those who are participating with experiements and development LED technology. As many of you know, I have a few threads already and have participated in many more threads about growth using LED's.
I myself am not a marijuana grower. I plan to do my experiments while growing tomatoes and eventually other vegitables that require direct sun or
intense lighting so my tests will still be viable towards this growing community.
Currently I am researching different things and planning my setup. My setup will include a total of 400 - 600 watts of LED's controlled with digital dimming and Pulse Width Modulation (PWM) which will allow for plenty of room to overdrive the led's to be able to get more light out of less LED's and making a more penetrating light.
Below is information for the newbies to LED's. I have compiled a basic list of information for people.
LED's have the potential to have a better efficency than other lighting methods like HPS. LED's can achieve the specific wavelengths in nanometers (nm) that are the plants peak absorption wavelengths for chlorophyl A + B and other plant processes. About %75 of the energy used by HID lights like HPS go directly towards heat and infared light, which is a bad guy for us growers. Wavelengths are the color of the light that is being emitted. HPS also produce lots of yellow and green light, about half of all visible light, which is what our eyes see the most of but that the plants do not absorb very much of so they are inefficient to provide for plant growth.
This link should give you a better understanding about the inefficentcy of HID lighing. Commercial Growing Analysis
There is a lot of technicality behind this and arguements on old OG threads, but for general purposes LED's dont emit radient heat, or too little for it to count, as opposed to HPS which emits lots of radient heat which can burn your plants if too close.
This is a list of peak wavelengths quoted form an old OG thread cached through google. This thread was made by Compgeek and can be found here: http://216.239.51.104/search?q=cache:IWwK_7_nqmkJ:www.overgrow.com/edge/showthread/t-721125.html
Although not all of these wavelengths are neccessary for growth, they all play a role in improving growth within the plant. This is where experiments need to be done on effeciency and importance of wavelengths for how they contribute to rate of growth.
PWM controls a "blink rate" for LED's. Most LED's are to have "Instant on" with a turn on time of less than 100 nanosecond (ns), which allows for LED's to have a very high blink rate or frequency. This is very usefull because not only does it save even more energy then what will already be saved with using LED's, but it also will not take away from the plants growth. The way this works the way it does is when one of the "receptors" on the plants leaf catches a photon, the receptor take a little time to transfer that photon to the rest of the plant. So while this receptor is temporarly busy light is not needed. Though, much research will need to be done to find the right frequency rate for cannabis and all other plants, there is much research that will give a general area of what frequency to use, the rest is fine tuning.
Overdriving LED's is another great benefit. Also overdriving should go together with PWM unless you strongly know what your doing. Reason being is because LED's have their specs that tell you max voltage and max current. If you were to go over these specs you could cause the LED to overheat and eventually burn out. But when you use PWM, the LED becomes turned off for a period of time, so in that moment the LED is not creating heat. This is where the overdriving comes in. You could overdrive the LED's and still maintain decent temperatures. Overdriving allow the LED's to put out more light which means that the light will penetrate further into the canopy and you want need as many LED's as you would if you did not overdrive.
The still save money when you overdrive and use PWM as opposed to if you didn't use those at all. Study has shown that using a duty cycle of %0.5 percent is all thats needed for growing plants. The reason being that the number is so low is because there only needes to be enough light let off so one photon can reach each receptor. So that means that there only needs to be a tiny blink because each receptor can only catch one photon.
To explain more about duty cycle for all the newbs. A duty cycle is the percetage of time that it is turned on in a period. A period is the whole amount of time for the pwm to complete that blink cycle.
I.E.: If you define your period as being one second, and your duty cycle is %75 then your LED will turn on for 3/4 of a second and turn off for 1/4 of a second and then do that cycle over and over again.
There are many types of LED's out there. There are differences in color, shape, power usage, and angle at which it output the light. There are links below to different LED companies with all the different types. Some of the types are built for thermal management in mind, others for production costs in mind. But you can easily find everything you could need.
Luxeon LED's
Lumileds, the cheaper place to buy Luxeons
SunLED
Dotlight
LED Lighting Supply
These are some links to different information including resistor calculators and array wizards to help you design what you want.
Calculators:
http://www.quickar.com/bestledcalc.php
http://www.superbrightleds.com/led_info.htm
http://metku.net/index.html?sect=view&n=1&path=mods/ledcalc/index_eng
LED Array Wizard
Info:
Circuit Tutorial
Wiring LED's
http://216.239.51.104/search?q=cach...ml+site:overgrow.com&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=1
And now some links to other products including LED's light to replace you household incandecents.
http://www.superbrightleds.com/led_prods.htm
Kits and PWM Kits
Here are some commercial LED grow lights that you can buy and avoid the PITA of making your own.
LED Grow Lights.com
LED Grow-Master
OK, I'm done for now. I'll add more when I'm not so drunk. Have a good night folks and happy growing
Hey folks. I have created this thread for those who are participating with experiements and development LED technology. As many of you know, I have a few threads already and have participated in many more threads about growth using LED's.
I myself am not a marijuana grower. I plan to do my experiments while growing tomatoes and eventually other vegitables that require direct sun or
intense lighting so my tests will still be viable towards this growing community.
Currently I am researching different things and planning my setup. My setup will include a total of 400 - 600 watts of LED's controlled with digital dimming and Pulse Width Modulation (PWM) which will allow for plenty of room to overdrive the led's to be able to get more light out of less LED's and making a more penetrating light.
Below is information for the newbies to LED's. I have compiled a basic list of information for people.
LED's have the potential to have a better efficency than other lighting methods like HPS. LED's can achieve the specific wavelengths in nanometers (nm) that are the plants peak absorption wavelengths for chlorophyl A + B and other plant processes. About %75 of the energy used by HID lights like HPS go directly towards heat and infared light, which is a bad guy for us growers. Wavelengths are the color of the light that is being emitted. HPS also produce lots of yellow and green light, about half of all visible light, which is what our eyes see the most of but that the plants do not absorb very much of so they are inefficient to provide for plant growth.
This link should give you a better understanding about the inefficentcy of HID lighing. Commercial Growing Analysis
There is a lot of technicality behind this and arguements on old OG threads, but for general purposes LED's dont emit radient heat, or too little for it to count, as opposed to HPS which emits lots of radient heat which can burn your plants if too close.
This is a list of peak wavelengths quoted form an old OG thread cached through google. This thread was made by Compgeek and can be found here: http://216.239.51.104/search?q=cache:IWwK_7_nqmkJ:www.overgrow.com/edge/showthread/t-721125.html
Beta-carotene 450nm 480-485nm dual peak
chlorophyll a 430nm 662nm dual peak
chlorophyll b 453nm 642nm dual peak
phycoerythrin 590nm single peak
phycocyanin 625nm single peak
670nm and 700nm for Emerson effect.
http://www.biologie.uni-hamburg.de/b-online/e24/12.htm
690nm from nasa
http://earth.esa.int/symposia/chris_proba_04/papers/19_merton.pdf
730nm
http://www.newton.dep.anl.gov/askasci/bot00/bot00582.htm
Although not all of these wavelengths are neccessary for growth, they all play a role in improving growth within the plant. This is where experiments need to be done on effeciency and importance of wavelengths for how they contribute to rate of growth.
PWM controls a "blink rate" for LED's. Most LED's are to have "Instant on" with a turn on time of less than 100 nanosecond (ns), which allows for LED's to have a very high blink rate or frequency. This is very usefull because not only does it save even more energy then what will already be saved with using LED's, but it also will not take away from the plants growth. The way this works the way it does is when one of the "receptors" on the plants leaf catches a photon, the receptor take a little time to transfer that photon to the rest of the plant. So while this receptor is temporarly busy light is not needed. Though, much research will need to be done to find the right frequency rate for cannabis and all other plants, there is much research that will give a general area of what frequency to use, the rest is fine tuning.
Overdriving LED's is another great benefit. Also overdriving should go together with PWM unless you strongly know what your doing. Reason being is because LED's have their specs that tell you max voltage and max current. If you were to go over these specs you could cause the LED to overheat and eventually burn out. But when you use PWM, the LED becomes turned off for a period of time, so in that moment the LED is not creating heat. This is where the overdriving comes in. You could overdrive the LED's and still maintain decent temperatures. Overdriving allow the LED's to put out more light which means that the light will penetrate further into the canopy and you want need as many LED's as you would if you did not overdrive.
The still save money when you overdrive and use PWM as opposed to if you didn't use those at all. Study has shown that using a duty cycle of %0.5 percent is all thats needed for growing plants. The reason being that the number is so low is because there only needes to be enough light let off so one photon can reach each receptor. So that means that there only needs to be a tiny blink because each receptor can only catch one photon.
To explain more about duty cycle for all the newbs. A duty cycle is the percetage of time that it is turned on in a period. A period is the whole amount of time for the pwm to complete that blink cycle.
I.E.: If you define your period as being one second, and your duty cycle is %75 then your LED will turn on for 3/4 of a second and turn off for 1/4 of a second and then do that cycle over and over again.
There are many types of LED's out there. There are differences in color, shape, power usage, and angle at which it output the light. There are links below to different LED companies with all the different types. Some of the types are built for thermal management in mind, others for production costs in mind. But you can easily find everything you could need.
Luxeon LED's
Lumileds, the cheaper place to buy Luxeons
SunLED
Dotlight
LED Lighting Supply
These are some links to different information including resistor calculators and array wizards to help you design what you want.
Calculators:
http://www.quickar.com/bestledcalc.php
http://www.superbrightleds.com/led_info.htm
http://metku.net/index.html?sect=view&n=1&path=mods/ledcalc/index_eng
LED Array Wizard
Info:
Circuit Tutorial
Wiring LED's
http://216.239.51.104/search?q=cach...ml+site:overgrow.com&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=1
And now some links to other products including LED's light to replace you household incandecents.
http://www.superbrightleds.com/led_prods.htm
Kits and PWM Kits
Here are some commercial LED grow lights that you can buy and avoid the PITA of making your own.
LED Grow Lights.com
LED Grow-Master
OK, I'm done for now. I'll add more when I'm not so drunk. Have a good night folks and happy growing
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