Quote Originally Posted by Hataman
Thanks for the feedback, Douglas1, very helpful and encouraging. The more I think about your comment that this is a good problem, the more I begin to see the light. All it takes, I think, is a simple strategy change. Rather than start the plant up high and lower it as the colas develop, I'm going to start the plant down low and let the colas stretch up into the light. This is testament, tutorial, and cautionary warning to others about the penetrating power of the 240W Blackstar vegger. I've carefully read everything I could find about this light (including a grow journal where a guy pitted a 240W Blackstar vegger against a 500W LED competitor) and by all accounts this light is universally underestimated. It just does not look all that powerful, and the intuitive reaction upon first seeing it in operation is to place it about 18" above the canopy. Judging from its effects on our plants, however, this is much too close (and inefficient and dangerous) for such a deceptively powerful light. I should back up and state that my DWC plant (RIP) was trained into a magnificent 2'x3' SCROG, and my hempy plants were flattened with LST into ~2 sq. ft. SCROG-like bushes. This shaping could definitely affect distances, but my ultimate point is the 240W Blackstar vegger is not a simple light. It has a learning curve, and I suspect when we as a user community finally crack its code, it will prove capable of some amazing production rates. Anyway, at this point, just an educated guess...
Ayah, late night senioritis, I meant 240W Blackstar bloomer, not vegger.
Hataman Reviewed by Hataman on . Led's light bleaching? on a legal medical grow the panels, (one veg, one bloom 240w blackstars) are roughly 16-18" above several plants, two in coco, two in fox farms, and two dwc.. all of the plants are stunted, all of the plants have dead foliage. Ph is good, temp is good, ppm is good.. several of the plants have white patches on their leaves, like all the color has left. most of the plants cotledons have dried up like a nitrogen defficiency... they have been treated with micronute foliar sprays.. canazyme, Rating: 5