Quote Originally Posted by oldsanclem
The bright red tail light is a very narrow spectrum. I have tried to use a white hight output leds in a tail light. Installed it in to the tail light. Put power to it , and no light came out the red lens. Reason a White led does not produce a spectrum of reds. NOW all the leds red, blue, green etc are all that way. Now if you look at the spectrum of growing its a smooth arc. NOT (freq's or angstroms )
IF leds worked it would be all over the internet and in every industral user would jump on them faster than a duck on a june bug.
O WELL back to using 30 year old florsents 4 ft bulbs and a 30 year old Mh ballast and a new bulbs.
O lord I see the light, zaaaaap , darn its a bug zapper.
Now think if LED did work effeciently industy would use them in a heart beat. After all its only a few Billion dollars saved each year.
Do pot grower know something industry does not know.
Bottom line my fairy godmusther is a whore and charges for her favors. imp:

The reason why you donâ??t get a red from what is called a white LED is that there is no red light in the LED's spectrum (hence it doesnâ??t appear the other side of your filter). Its really a blue LED with yellow phosphor (thatâ??s what I've learnt). Interesting experiment though!

I really donâ??t see how that could affect the chances of LED plant lighting succeeding? LEDs donâ??t emit a wide spectrum because of the way they make light. That is an advantage in plant lighting, as plants only use certain bandwidth of light energy, so what you said is actually an advantage for plant lighting and is not a problem at all really.

if you want red light on your car's break lights, I would use red LED's that emit red light. With ordinary lighting, your having to filter out all those colours apart from the colour you want (i.e. red) - highly inefficient! with LEDs you just get that one colour you wanted emitted right from the source itself â?? no need to filter.

Hope this helps.