Sean_Buckley
Fishaholic
Is 2700K good for plants?
Sean
Sean
It's actually 5000-6700 for plants, as at that kelvin rating, the light is similiar to that of the sun.opiesilver said:Nope. You need somewhere between 5000K and 10,000K.
Yep.Discomafia said:It's actually 5000-6700 for plants, as at that kelvin rating, the light is similiar to that of the sun.opiesilver said:Nope. You need somewhere between 5000K and 10,000K.
My plants were growing well with these bulbs, and they were 2700K as well, but yours are different.
Plants can and do use the spectrum provided between 5000K and 10000K. Please don't confuse a 10000K bulb with an Actinic bulb as they are not the same at all.Discomafia said:It's actually 5000-6700 for plants, as at that kelvin rating, the light is similiar to that of the sun.opiesilver said:Nope. You need somewhere between 5000K and 10,000K.
My plants were growing well with these bulbs, and they were 2700K as well, but yours are different.
Very interesting post. Are you saying that my plants will grow even more bushier wither higher colour temp. bulbs? At the moment I have 61W of 3000K, 20W of 6700K and 18W of 7500K. Perhaps swapping one or two 3000K bulbs for 10000K would give me even better growth.opiesilver said:A red, or cooler bulb, 5000K, is more heavily weighted toward the red wavelength and containing very little blue will cause plants to grow really fast and leggy (large distances between nodes).
So ideally you want a combination of the two ends of the usable spectrum for your plants. You can mix 10000K and 6700K with very good results.