richard@gryphon.COM (Richard Sexton) (11/17/89)
Yesterday I stated that the best tubes for growing plants were the wide spectrum gro lux tubes. I've received some more information from Sylvania, and I'm going to temper my comments a bit. Sylvania reccomends mixing Gro Lux and Wide Spectrum Grow Lux in a 1:1 ratio. Plants need the wide far red spectrum emitted by the WS tube, but also the sharp peak of red emitted by the gro-lux. Interestingly enough, they have some sample setups for terrestrial plants in which they use 1:1:1 cool white, gor lux and gro lux wide spectrum. I'm not sure if thats to supplant the blue end of the spectrum or just to provide a better CRI, but either way, a 5500K tube such as a GE Chroma 50 (or 75), or Philips Colortone 50 or Sylvania Spec 50 would probably be a better choice. I havn't received any data from Philips yes on their version of gro lux (``agro lites''). Both GE and Sylvania make plant growth tubes. Sylvania owns the trademark on ``Gro Lux''. GE calls theirs ``Gro and Sho''. Both have wide spectrum versions of their plant growth lights. The spectra appear to be roughly equal. The graphs they sent me use different scales, but they appear to be the same curve when allowences are made. If they are different, it's not by much. The one BIG difference is the variery of sizes and shapes these tubes come in. GE is the loser here. They make their tubes in 18 inch, 2 foot and 4 foot, and thats all. Sylvania makes: Gro Lux: 8 watts 12 inch 14 watts 15 inch 15 watts 18 inch 20 watts 24 inch 30 watts 36 inch 40 watts 48 inch 115 watts 48 inch Very High Output (VHO) 160 watts 72 inch VHO 105 watts 96 inch High Output (HO) 215 watts 98 inch VHO In Gro Lux Wide Spectrum: 15 watts 18 inch 20 watts 24 inch 22 watts 9 inch diameter circular 25 watts 42 inch 40 watts 48 inch 115 watts 48 inch VHO 160 watts 72 inch VHO 105 watts 96 inch HO 215 watts 96 inch VHO 215 watts 96 inch VHO with reflector This last one (with reflector) is kind of interesting. There is a piece id metal inside the tube that only allows light to be emitted through a 235 degree opening. Do not install them upside down. Ahem. Also interesting is the 9" circular tube. Usefull for hex xhaped tanks, although it would be more usefull if it came in other (larger!) sizes. Note that the wierd sized 42" tube is a T-6 tube, which is to say it's thinner than the 1 1/2" T-12's. Particularly annoying is the lack of a 36" wide spectrum tube. They make it it gro lux, but gro lux wide spectrum. The longevity figures for these tubes are rather intersting. From 12 inch to 36 inch, 7500 hours. 24 inch is 9000 hours. 48 inch is 20,000 hours. 96 inch HO is 12,000 hours. 48, 72 and 96 inch VHO's are 10,000 hours. 9 inch circular tube is 12,000 hours. So it seems 48 inch is really the size to use, a fact you may want to take into consideration when building any permanent housing for a bunch of tanks. Take this from somebody who has a bunch of 36 inch tanks, and a 72 inch wide stand housing most of my tanks. -- ``He is good with numbers, but I keep having to tell him how to work the VCR over and over again'' -- Rajan Mahadevan's roommate richard@gryphon.COM {routing site}!gryphon!richard
richard@gryphon.COM (Richard Sexton) (11/18/89)
In article <2208@jato.Jpl.Nasa.Gov> baalke@mars.UUCP (Ron Baalke) writes: >What about Vita-Lite? I heard this was better than Gro Lux. It depends what you're trying to do. Vita lites are a 5500K, CRI 91 tube. Very blueish, and are supposed to simulate equatorial noon day sunlight. They do this very well. What they don't do very well, is grow plants. They have too much green, and far too little red. Philips Ultralume 30 is a better choice if you want a tube that has the right radiation for plants and still has a good CRI. If you don't care about the CRI, the ``plant growth tubes'' such as Sylvania gro lux, Philips AGRO lite and GE gro and sho will give you better results. Interestingly enough, both Sylvania and GE make gro lux type tubes and wide spectrum gro lux type tubes. They reccomend you use the two in a 1:1 ratio. The Philips tube - and this is still guesswork, I have to study it some more - seems to be a complete spectra. Lots of the far red that the gro lux types are deficiant in, and a great whopping blue spike. I have test date run by UNC and Philips comparing dry weight of plants grown under 1) cool white and incandescent, 2) wide spectrum growth lights, 3) Agro lites. The AGRO LITES won hands down. There are two mysteries to this tube. First, why is Philips doing such a good job at keeping it a secret and why don't they make it in some *useful* sizes, following Sylvania's hint. -- USENET: where the name goes on, before the quality goes in. richard@gryphon.COM {routing site}!gryphon!richard