200000 sq ft manufacturing plant running 24/7. Average water use alone per day is 26000 gallons, most of which goes to simply cool the place, even in the "winter" with so much machinery running.JoynersHotPeppers said:$24,000 monthly for electric bill?
Scuba_Steve said:I would hope your waste water on the RO is being effectively utilized. That could cover your water needs completely. I believe mine produces 5:1.
What is the color spectrum on those lights?
When you said plant I did not think you meant a treatment plant, this is pepper forum therefore I expected you to mean plant...Nuclieye said:200000 sq ft manufacturing plant running 24/7. Average water use alone per day is 26000 gallons, most of which goes to simply cool the place, even in the "winter" with so much machinery running.
Our facility makes over 6000 gallons of RO water daily also. It's a lot of work to stay on top of it all.
Lumens are a horrible method to measure light for our purpose.ajdrew said:LEDs are getting better and better, but will continue to confuse the consumer as long as manufacturers continue to make odd claims. I cant make heads or tails of them yet. So many different claims. But I can understand the idea that if a light source does not waste electricity making heat or light in a spectrum not used that they can be much, much, much more efficient.
So I don't think we can look at lumens alone to decide what replaces what. How many usable lumens are there? If I ever go that route, I am going to have to judge by what the things grow cause I am not bright enough (pardon the pun) to figure it out based on what the makers claim they consume and put out.
Scuba_Steve said:Lumens are a horrible method to measure light for our purpose.
PAR reading are much more accurate. I know they are still not perfect, but they do the trick.
When I judge an LEDs usability, I compare its PAR output at a measured distance to that of said other fixture. The place LEDs really have an upper hand is that the reading at 3ft is fairly close to the reading at 6in. A halide on the other hand has substantial losses as distance increases. It makes up for this though with retardedly high numbers at 6in...
ajdrew said:But I can understand the idea that if a light source does not waste electricity making heat or light in a spectrum not used that they can be much, much, much more efficient.
mikeg said:I don't think every plant uses every frequency. Marine aquaria require special light sources because some non-green algae (and some animals (ie.: sea anemones, coral) need some frequencies not sufficiently provided by most conventional light bulbs.
Admittedly, we're still learning.
A light source that could accomodate any plant species without emitting frequencies of un-needed light would be nice. However, you'd need one hell of a database just to adjust a very complex machine, so that it would provide a perfect spectrum profile for what you're growing.
Restricting your plants in your growing system to one species -- Capsicum chinense, perhaps -- would be fine.... until you decided to grow CGN 21500 or Mata Frade, which have purple leaves.
Hmmm. I started this post to argue your point, Able Eye, but now that i've finished my coffee, i think you may be right.
I don't want to take away from the main topic of this thread but I had to comment on what you said aj.ajdrew said:Scuba Steve - Exactly! I am strictly in the fluorescent and HID department, but appreciate LED for being able to get close without the burn. One day I will start exploring, just not bright or rich enough for it to be today.
ajdrew said:Able, maybe they use all the spectrum in some capacity but if they used it all they would be invisible. Have green bulbs in the grow room in case I need to go in there during the night cycle. Read they don't notice green light at all.