Quote Originally Posted by Weezard

Horseshit!

Comparisons?!
Where?
Your all-blue grow yielded less than a half z of WET, moldy, stemmy, skimpy branch, that you tried to call .5 grams per Watt.

That, is simply delusional!

The wet:dry weight ratio for cannabis is about 7:1!
Trimmed, an dried properly, your actual yield was less than 2 grams.

I'm still looking for trees in your photo album.

Oh, Wait! you don't have any photo albums do ya?

When, and if, you ever do post acceptable results, be sure to include plenty of "photon flux readings", OK?

I don't mind you creating a phony persona here, lotsa folks do that.
But using it to dispense bad advice that can affect patients medication is not acceptable.
Please stop doing that.

Yer gettin' on my nerves,
Weezard
I don't understand the vitriol.

You want to claim horseshit but when people want to know just how well their lights perform - you're going to want numbers.

Calling me phony makes me pretty sad. Especially when I just finished yet ANOTHER system that can cut the LED power you need by HALF.

Video - TinyPic - Free Image Hosting, Photo Sharing & Video Hosting

And there it is.

Plain and simple, Weezard - I only deal with RAW science. If you remember, that blue led was an EXPERIMENT (even listed as such) so your calling bullshit on a mere "I wonder if this will work" project is rather uncalled for.

Phony, wow. I had thought better of you Weezard, maybe I thought wrong?

And yes, I will include photon flux readings. In fact, let me go ahead and provide you a relevant link.

Sunmaster Grow Lamps - Plants And Lighting - Photons

Seriously, you know some good stuff, man, but when it comes to actual photobiology, your bare-necessities approach still has limitations. You completely forget the Pr/Pfr reaction where chlorophyll first prefers a 660nm or so photon, then after it receives that it PREFERS to receive a 720-760nm photon. There's also a blue-based version of this as well, working from 460nm photons first and preferring to receive a 390nm photon afterwards.

Relevant University link: Plant Physiology