Results 11 to 19 of 19
-
07-19-2010, 07:18 PM #11
OPSenior Member
86-88 Degrees too Hot?
So I should buy a 600w HPS bulb then? Thanks for the tip, the last thing I wanna do is fry all of my shit. :thumbsup:
Originally Posted by khyberkitsune
-
07-19-2010, 08:34 PM #12
OPSenior Member
86-88 Degrees too Hot?
Sorry about the double post guys.
Anyway....
I went into my local hydro store and asked about the issue you brought up Khyber. That being me running a 1,000w bulb converted by an interchangable ballast at 600w. I told the guys exactly what I had, and how I was running it. He told me the exact opposite of what you said. He told me that running the 1000w bulb at 600w was not only conserving energy, but prolonging the life of the bulb itself.
2 very different opinions.... someone please clarify.
-
07-19-2010, 08:50 PM #13
Senior Member
86-88 Degrees too Hot?
I used to install street lighting when I worked for Memphis Concrete Cutting. Any experienced electrician will tell you to match wattage for wattage.
Originally Posted by disoBAYish
That 1000w bulb is still going to try drawing more than it's being fed, this will damage ANY ballast, magnetic or electronic. It shortens the life of the ballast, and those tubes are designed for MINIMUM 800w input power at 480-660V. Anything less will cause damage.
-
07-19-2010, 09:22 PM #14
Senior Member
86-88 Degrees too Hot?
That must be a Galaxy ballast? Nice ballasts. You're in the neighbourhood with temps, if you run into too many problems turn it down to 600w. You are supposed to use a 1000w bulb for all settings. I imagine its to keep people from screwing up if they put a 400w bulb in and cranked it up to 1000w.
Originally Posted by disoBAYish
-
07-19-2010, 09:30 PM #15
OPSenior Member
86-88 Degrees too Hot?
My ballast is a digital 1,000w Lumitek.... The purple kind. It makes sense to me that you would use a 1,000w bulb for all settings, for reasons like you stated. However I also trust Khyber's judgement.
Originally Posted by killerweed420
What to do, what to do....
-
07-28-2010, 06:35 AM #16
OPSenior Member
86-88 Degrees too Hot?
Update:
After many readjustments, I have my grow room down to a consistant 77 degrees. Thanks for all the help guys, the grow is going well. :thumbsup:
-
07-28-2010, 11:27 AM #17
Senior Member
86-88 Degrees too Hot?
Cooltube? I'd like to know how you managed that nice 10 degree drop :jointsmile:
Originally Posted by disoBAYish
-
07-29-2010, 03:19 AM #18
OPSenior Member
86-88 Degrees too Hot?
It was a 3 step process that transpired over the course of a week and a half as I slowly adjusted things with it a little here and there.
Originally Posted by bigtopsfinn
1.) Simply introducing the plants into the grow room cooled the temp by 2 degrees. I think this is mostly because of the cool damp soil. I water them every other day with 48 degree water at a 7.0 PH level.
2.) I removed the ballast from the grow room. That dropped temps about 1-2 degrees.
3.) I trimmed a few feet of ducting off of the blower fan to give it a little more horsepower. This did me wonders as it dropped temps down about 4-6 degrees. The seals to the blower were not air tight either, fixing that halped as well.
So in short... I introduced plants, removed ballast, then fixed the blower ducting.
-
07-29-2010, 01:25 PM #19
Senior Member
86-88 Degrees too Hot?
That my friends is the KISS principle in action...:thumbsup:..(Keep it Simple, Stoner)
Originally Posted by disoBAYish
Advertisements
Similar Threads
-
Does 28 degrees = death?
By Steelwool in forum Outdoor GrowingReplies: 5Last Post: 10-12-2009, 11:37 PM -
103 DEGREES
By Weedhound in forum GreenGrassForums LoungeReplies: 13Last Post: 07-05-2007, 07:20 AM -
under 75 degrees
By bluecraze08 in forum Plant ProblemsReplies: 4Last Post: 03-28-2006, 10:19 PM -
100 Degrees
By Da1KrayzieThug in forum Basic GrowingReplies: 15Last Post: 01-11-2006, 07:19 AM -
95 degrees, what damage?
By kryptobs2000 in forum Indoor GrowingReplies: 7Last Post: 08-23-2004, 02:13 AM








Register To Reply
Staff Online