...NOONE CAN DISPUTE MY RESULTS, YOU CAN LEAD A HORSE TO WATER, BUT CANT FORCE IT TO DRINK. LET SEE YOUR PIC. LOL
...NOONE CAN DISPUTE MY RESULTS, YOU CAN LEAD A HORSE TO WATER, BUT CANT FORCE IT TO DRINK. LET SEE YOUR PIC. LOL
Watch out Sam my brotha, one of the admins hate anyone who is pro 24/0 light cycle. Removed the picture and proof from Bob and Rumple. Lots of folks showing cool proof of no dark cycle but all get removed. Can't keep the truth in the dark.
My plants grow 33% faster with out that Calvin dude helping (how is that possible?). Did um both ways 18/6 much slower and un-healthy. My 24/0 plants are much bigger and finish with more bud.
Did it both ways and know the truth.
**read it quick**
u nowhere near this dude
LOL this guy is flowering for 81 days LMAO, Im Done in almost 3/4 that time. LOL, If flowering is taking that long then Im sure your Vegging is horribly long too....
LOL this guy is flowering for 81 days LMAO, Im Done in almost 3/4 that time.
Dude, guys who finish fast don't brag about it, they go see their doctor! At 120 days, my trichs are still clear.
@ all,
Watching plants is one way to tell when they are getting too much light at any one time, or over the whole day. If the leafs at the upper canopy angle upward, like they are praying, that usually means the plant is trying to reduce the surface area of the leafs. Plants do this as a means to reduce the photons striking the leafs, which in turn reduces the light-energy for the plant (photon absorption). Kind of like how human squint their eye in bright sun.
Plants also 'canoe' their leafs (curl inward) to reduce surface area to reduce the photons they absorb.
If plants are 'praying' at the top section of canopy, or if the leafs are canoeing, it's a good sign too much light is being provided. If both are happening at the same time then photoinhibition (reduced rate of photosynthesis, etc) is usually soon to follow...
When the plant angles leafs upward or canoes leafs it's the plants' attempt to protect itself from light saturation and photo damage.
Thread is kinda long... not sure if this has been mentioned but,,
When you put plants under 24/7 light without big dips in nighttime temps the plants will free run. This basically means that without external input to the plants circadian clock, it will still oscillate. Plants express their genes rhythmically, but their period is not exactly 24 hours. This means that under 24/7 lighting, you are not entraining the plant, and therefore have no idea which phase of it's circadian rhythm it's on. It may be in it's subjective day or subjective night phases at any time of the day.
Now for the important part. 24/7 lighting gives a slight disadvantage to your plants when you flip the lights to 12/12. Since you may be flipping the lights off during the plants subjective day, the plant must now entrain to this new light cycle before it can begin to flower. Only once the plant is entrained will the transcriptional activator Constans(CO) line up with the correct corresponding light period, and induce flowering. Since the external coincidence model is based on the plants biological clock matching with the corresponding day length, you will delay the onset of flowering if these do not match up.
How much? Probably tops only two or three days so not a super big deal. I also quickly want to mention that when you flip the lights to 12/12 on a free running plant it will not be able to maximize growth for that day. This is especially true if you start out your flowering period with an extended dark period, which by the way is completely stupid and makes no biological sense at all!!
Plant is in subjective night-->You switch the lights off--> Unexpectedly extended night
– Starch used up before dawn or subjective day
– Starvation genes turn on
None of this information is crucial for a successful grow but I though it'd be worth mentioning...
spurr said:Nope, plant rate of photosynthesis is reduced after about the 17th-18th hour of non-stop light. At that point much of the active rubisco has been converted into inactive rubisco, which means the plants can't keep up high rate of photosynthesis, because rubisco activase is less able to 'do it's job' under 24/0. Also under 24/0 C assimilate/partitioning goes down past the 17th-18th hours, as well as Co2 fixation, etc.
You described it well when you wrote about how plants need to 'switch' modes (excuse my simple description) to carry out light independent reactions such as starch conversion, cellular repair, etc., if light is provided 24/0. Plants simply can't use light to photosynthesize and carry out other needed reactions simultaneously, and keep up a high rate of photosynthesis.
So, do we know, at what rate the plant is photosynthesizing after about 18 hours; and for how long this reduced rate is sustained?
I have to assume its substantially reduced.. One would have to know the rate, roughly, if one were to attempt to test this.
spurr said:This topic is also why using Co2 over ~1,200 ppm is bad, as well as temps over ~89'F. In both instances the amount of rubisco activase is reduced, thus the plant is less able to convert inactive rubisco into active rubisco. That means the rate of photosynthesis goes way down and the plant suffers (just like if using 24/0 of light). I have a few studies on cananbis that looked at ideal level of Co2, along with PPFD and temp, all found Co2 saturation at ~> 1,000 ppm, just like most other C3 plants. Thus using more than 1,000 ppm is a waste, and using more than 1,200 ppm can/does hinder rate of photosynthesis due to reduction of rubisco activase. That is another area of BS in the cannabis world, i.e. claims that 1,500 ppm of Co2 is ideal (that has never been proven, it's only more conjecture and anecdotal evidence from 'first hand experience' so loved by some in this thread). Check out this thread for more info I wrote on that topic: "A simple question for growers that use CO2"
"Robust Plants' Secret? Rubisco Activase!"
Steven J. Crafts-Brander and Micheal E. Salvucci
Agricultural Research Magazine, Nov. 2002, Vol. 50, No. 11
http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/ar/archiv.../plant1102.htm
I usually run at about 92F when applying CO2, just what I've found best from 88,92, 95, 97.. Maybe I should of tried 90 hah.. But I also read this in that link
"Denaturing of rubisco activase can occur at temperatures as low as 89.6°F. But rubisco continues to function effectively until temperatures reach 131°F, Crafts-Brandner and Salvucci found."
First of all I have used 24 hours veg for over 20 years, I did experiments with dry weight yields and Cannabinoid total yields at both 24 and 18/6 and then flowered at 12/12. 24 gave higher yields, what can I say?
Were the plants better off under 18/6, maybe but I did not see 24 as a real problem for them in any way.
I also in my greenhouse used 60 w blue grow incancesdents one per 10 square meters or about 100 square feet in the winter at night with natural sunlight as photoperiod correction for large veg mother plants. Never lost a single mother, they very slowly grow all winter, which is what I wanted it was my plant library. They only correct photoperiod.
I also grow small mothers under 8-10 C with the lights on for 2 hours then off for 6 and the plants stay alive, slowly grow and stay veg for 6 months at a time. This is in a refrigerated/heated TL lighted grow chamber.
I am sure that none of this is the very best for them, it is what is best for me, and I can't find the negative effects of any of them.
I don't really grow under lights, I use the sun and kinda laugh when people using artificial lights make claims about which artificial light is best, be honest the sun is best for many reasons starting with the lack or minimal of carbon footprint.
Growing Cannabis under lights is just not right to me, I know many will say WTF? But I refuse to flower under lights, I know you can, but I choose not to as it is not needed. If you live in an area where you must keep cultivation private I understand the need, but it it because of the laws not what is best for the plant or planet.
How much electricity do you think is consumed daily worldwide growing Cannabis? I am sure it is enough to be concerned about the effects the electrical production causes for us all.
-SamS
The reason I chose to use 18/6 over 24/0
Quick refresher.
Photosynthesis - makes food for your plant, stores it, uses h2o, uses co2 etc.
Respiration - Uses the stored food and energy, produces h2o and co2, etc.
Photosynthesis is light dependent, so it only happens during your lights on period. Respiration on the other hand is not dependent on light, so it happens during lights on and off. It's not that the plants "need to sleep", it's that during lights out they're not pulling double duty. They can just work on respiration using the stored food and energy to grow big and strong!
Because artificial lighting CAN NOT completely replace the natural light of the sun... Yet. We create an artificial environment for indoor grows but it is still lacking. So to compensate for the insufficient quality of light we compensate with quantity.