cfl, red and blue?

zedragon

Well-Known Member
if your going to buy cfls made for growing then it will tell you if not and your buying household cfls then cool white for veg and warm white for flower, blue is alot brighter to the eye! you`ll know as soon as you see them!
 

robbie82

Well-Known Member
Its not the color of the bulb, its the color temperature which is what your looking for

6500k - for Veging
2400k - for Flowering
6500k/2400k Mixed Spectrum - for flowering as well.
 

Dumboy

Active Member
those numbers are
spectrum
I just bought some today
I got the daylight(27,000k)
and the soft white(55,000k)

I hope 55,000k will do instead of 65,000k
 

kagenical

Well-Known Member
Use the 2700k ones for flowering, and the 5500k ones for vegging I say. I think your numbers are mixed though... Typically, soft white bulbs have a lower K value than daylight bulbs.

But here, read this:

Lumens are a quantitative measure of how bright a lightbulb is. It's a measure of "brightness" so to speak.

The "k" value is called the bulb's "Kelvin" value. This is a measure of the "colour" of the bulb. The higher the "K" value, the bluer the light is. A 6500k bulb will have more of a bluish spectrum than any bulb with a lower kelvin value, and less blue than a bulb with a higher value.
 

Bricks007

Active Member
i have two 48w 5000k CFL's at the moment and also got a 48w 3000k (warm red light) will this light combind with the two 5000k be ok for vegging and not force the plant into flowering?
 

robbie82

Well-Known Member
those numbers are
spectrum
I just bought some today
I got the daylight(27,000k)
and the soft white(55,000k)

I hope 55,000k will do instead of 65,000k
5500k Is fine. I used them mixed with 6500k and they worked fine

And actually the 2400ks are warm light
And 5500k/6500k Is daylight

Daylight is for veg
Warm light is for flowering.
 
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