Effects of Light Intensity on Plant Growth

Greetings, AFN members, OSP here. I’m a new AFN member moving in from another forum. After sneaking around a number of threads here looking for secret information, I’ve decided to start this thread. I want to evaluate the effects of light intensity on plant growth. More specifically, how lighting can be used to encourage or minimize plant stretch.
In the short time I’ve been a member here I’ve met a number of very knowledgeable growers, and I’m inviting each of you to participate or chime in as you see fit. Since I am new to AFN I’m sure I’ve missed a lot of interested parties. If you are reading this feel free to tag in anyone I’ve missed:
@fettled6 @912GreenSkell @bushmasterar15 @Waira @MedGrower @Son of Hobbes @Nosias @Screwauger @HemiSync @ChroToker @Need4Weed

I've grown photoperiods since forever under High Intensity Discharge (HID) lighting, and stretch has always been a thing to plan for. Several years ago I decided to experiment with an autoflower freebie, and since then I've completed (12) single-plant autoflower grows. To the point that I'm not doing photoperiods anymore. Maybe again one day. I have a Colombian Gold freebie that has brought back memories, but not today.
In the process of migrating from photoperiods to autoflowers, I also began a transition from HID to LED lighting. Over this period I began to see a pattern. With every one of my HID grows, all my autoflowers exhibited healthy stretch. It started quicker than photoperiods, but the overall effect was similar. Low Stress Training (LST) was effective, bud quality was very good and yield was very good to excellent. But with my LED grows, absolutely NONE of my autoflowers stretched. I had complete grows that never exceeded 10” in height.But with LED I can’t help but think much more is possible. Over 44+ years of growing I’ve seen well trained plants out-yield plants with no training every time. So I want the ability to encourage stretch in my plants.
For the sake of other AFN members, I believe the inverse of this stretch phenomena could be very beneficial to growers with a limited amount of grow space headroom. I want to prove or disprove, to some relative degree of certainty, that light intensity can be used to influence stretch when growing cannabis. But first I need to gather data on other growers’ experiences with plant stretch, and its association to light intensity during the plant’s lifecycle.

This is NOT an opinion piece of “is LED better than HID?” LED is certainly different, and in many respects (heat &efficiency) we all know it IS better. And this is NOT an attempt to compare LED lighting brands. There are numerous characteristics of LED lighting that determine light quality, and our most excellent site admin, @Son of Hobbes has started a thread on what parameters can be used to define those. His efforts may be reviewed here: https://www.autoflower.org/threads/what-should-be-on-a-grow-light-review.64857/ I’ve added a few well chosen thoughts on that topic - PAR watts, efficiency, most favored color spectrum, etc.. But I’m not smart enough to make that final differentiation so I’m happy to watch as SOH finishes that. The only facts I intend to present here are those I’ve experienced with my auto grows.

There are a number of other factors besides lighting that affect plant growth. In an effort to keep this thread focused on light intensity with no outside variables, I asked one of AFN’s most experienced members, MedGrower, for his input. His comments, and my follow up confirming those variables were addressed, can be found in his grow thread located at https://www.autoflower.org/threads/...-dwc-hs1-telos-0008.64718/page-2#post-1758834
In consideration to MedGrower, if you have any comments / questions, send them to me or post here. I don’t want to trash his grow thread with my conspiracy theory so I’m asking each of you to please share that consideration with me.

For the sake of this study I’d like to focus on the two main lighting factors that control intensity - light height throughout the grow cycle, and “power” of the light over the grow canopy; i.e. watts per sq.ft.. Light height is an easy factor to define as long as we document the variation during a plant’s growth cycle. Plant canopy area is an easy measure. Power consumption is an easy measure. I know, watts per sq.ft. is not the most meaningful measure of an LED’s efficiency. But until or if we ever reach consensus of an industry standard measure for all lighting types, I am using watts consumed at the wall, per square foot. No matter how much we insist this is not the best method (I agree), wattage consumed per square foot is the only readily available factor across all lighting types. And no matter how much we agree to disagree, it should provide a reasonable enough classification of small / medium / large lighting to support this study.

My light ratings are 62.5W/sq.ft. for HID and 65W.sq.ft. for LED. As to other influences on plant stretch, my grow techniques with HID and LED are as close to identical as one can get for environmental control and nutrient regimen. So enough intro, let’s kick this in the ass as I describe my experiences with autoflowers to date.

My starting system for HID is a 250W cooltube and batwing reflector with a metal halide bulb for veg and a high pressure sodium for bloom. The tent is a 4 sq. ft. system (2' X 2' X 5’3") by Secret Jardin. I configured it with (2) 4” 170CFM centrifugal fans, one for light cooling and the other for odor control through a 12” X 4” Phresh carbon filter). My nutrient regimen is General Hydroponics’ expert recirculating formula with some strength and slight ingredient tweaks. This regimen has not changed between HID and LED grows.
I grow hydroponically, and my system is configured for a single plant in a DIY 4 gallon Ebb ‘n Gro net pot with hydroton clay pebbles. The system floods automatically every two hours for 15 minutes. I call this DIY because I do not rely upon the complex valves and fittings normally associated with commercially available ebb and grow systems. Those systems rely upon multiple pumps, flow control valves and timers opening and closing with each flood cycle to deliver and recover nutrients to/from the plant. A strength of these commercial systems is they enable the reservoir to sit at the same height as the grow containers. Negatives are they are complex and expensive. My system relies upon a passive DIY manifold sitting on top of the reservoir, and the only moving part is an inexpensive and very reliable 170 gph hydro pump. Total ebb n’grow component cost with four net pot buckets was under $100. I bought four net pot buckets to simplify plant positioning changes throughout my grows, and to run parallel grows in separate tents. My DIY manifold does raise system height by the height of the reservoir, but the entire reservoir, tent and plant container system comes in under 7’ tall. It’s a quality system with all the right parts, and it fits in a closet if it has to (mine doesn’t).

I’m going to drift off topic for a moment as I’ve been known to do. I’ve used all types of hydro systems for many years and this is my favorite. It re-oxygenates the root zone after each flood every two hours. Supply to the net pot is positive pressure flow, while draining is passive / gravity, so aggressive root growth is pushed back into the net pot and will never cause a clog in the system’s hydro line. And even if a clog were to somehow mysteriously occur, overflow is not possible due to the design of the manifold. The system is fully automated - I recently took an eight day trip with no worries that the system would stay fully functional until I returned, and it did. A separate reservoir (I use 12 to 14 gallons) from the grow container makes nutrient changes and maintenance simple, and the added capacity gives me plenty of “headroom” in the nutrient mix as the plant drinks.
Here’s a pic of the original HID tent. The manifold is the white bucket to the left outside the tent. The ebb ‘n Gro bucket is slightly out of position on the shelf behind the tent:

IMG
 
Thanks to you all for the kind words & the rep's!
While we're here, I'm having some thoughts on the Rhino Ryder. Please feel free to share your experiences.

All my past grows have averaged 14 days to show good flower. This one is 30 days from 4-node seedling transplant and STILL ain't there yet. Showing a FEW preflowers, just two-pistil groups that you REALLY have to look closely to find them. Basically she is still in a healthy vegetative growth state where she's putting on good branching infrastructure across the canopy.

So the question is... is it possible to trigger a "slow" auto by shortening daylight time? That's a photoperiod plant trait, does it apply / will it work here?


Is there even such a thing as a "slow" auto?
Have I been mind-scanned by modern interweb propaganda to imprint that term? I've seen it referenced somewhere before, but I don't have firsthand experience with auto's not blooming, so I don't know. Question what you don't know, then ask your friends.

So if I have a "slow" auto, what is the minimum lights-off time that will encourage bloom?
I know 12 / 12 will induce a shovel handle to bloom with the right nutes. I also know that
every hour of light on a plant contributes to better yield, up to a point. So if I can grow 18 / 6 and force bloom, I'd rather do that than drop all the way to 12 /12.
More likely, this is a not-quite-stable phenotype with not-quite-enough autoflower genes. But that doesn't do anything to induce bloom for me with this plant.

So yesterday I dropped the light cycle from 20 / 4 to 18 / 6. Unless someone can educate me to a better way, I'll give that a few days before considering a further reduction. And if I need to drop it again, will 16 / 8 be the next stop?​

Anyone with knowledge here, please post in. I don't want to bite the bullet and drop the lights to 12 / 12 unless I have to.





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Hey man, great result on that BC! :drool:

I've had some stubborn autos, all were Sativa's Dom and have had tried a few things to trigger them.

36-48hrs of light deprivision along with a drop to 12/12 for 5 days seemed to do the trick. I was then able to run 18/6

They were under t5 and blurples 24/0 then went to 600w HPS 20/4 then 18/6 as they were not progressing before trying the above.

Your mileage may vary but that is my experience.


f6
 
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Next grow I'm going with 6x 3500k CBX3590 on 2x Bluetooth controlled drivers.

The array will be 3 + 3 in a star of David pattern in a 4x4x8 tent over 4 hydro autoflowers.

Now what I plan to do for the most part is use the Bluetooth app to mimic sunrise and sunset.

However, when the little buggers get stretching I plan to program the each overlayed set of 3 to one set dimming while one set get brighter!

The idea is I can make then stop shooting to the sky and change direction!

I could do it over short or longer time frames and mix and match any amount of combinations of intensity shift.

The app is called Avi on

What do you guys recon?


f6
 
Thanks @fettled6 So to make sure I understand your experience, 18 / 6 didn't do it? And it took 36-48 total darkness, followed by a drop to 12/12 for five days, after which 18/6 worked for the remainder of the grow?
The leaf structure on this Rhino Ryder definitely looks sativa with the narrow leaves, but waaaayyyy too early to see if the top cola structure will look sativa as well.
This is a change in grow technique for me as well. I started under one of @BigSm0 's 55W COB's, the 3500K version, and as soon as LST started I hung a second one. The plant is showing very good vegetative growth, keeping me busy leaf pruning to promote good top growth on every branch, just not showing flower. I've already started today's 18 / 6 lights-on cycle but I think tomorrow at noon I will start the 48 hours of darkness, followed by 12 / 12 for five days.

@Autotron You and I discussed your similar problem with your last grow but I don't recall what it took to get yours to full bloom? If memory serves, some slight reduction in light cycle didn't do it so it took 12 / 12? I think we felt you ended up with a full-on photoperiod, which could be / might be different from what I'm seeing....

@HemiSync @Waira @MedCzech any similar experiences with your past grows? I'm going to try mimicking F6's experience with light cycle, but your thoughts welcomed as well. Based upon F6's experience, I think there really IS such a thing as a "slow" auto? If it holds full bloom after returning to 18 / 6 that's confirmation.
 
Thanks @fettled6 So to make sure I understand your experience, 18 / 6 didn't do it? And it took 36-48 total darkness, followed by a drop to 12/12 for five days, after which 18/6 worked for the remainder of the grow?
The leaf structure on this Rhino Ryder definitely looks sativa with the narrow leaves, but waaaayyyy too early to see if the top cola structure will look sativa as well.
This is a change in grow technique for me as well. I started under one of @BigSm0 's 55W COB's, the 3500K version, and as soon as LST started I hung a second one. The plant is showing very good vegetative growth, keeping me busy leaf pruning to promote good top growth on every branch, just not showing flower. I've already started today's 18 / 6 lights-on cycle but I think tomorrow at noon I will start the 48 hours of darkness, followed by 12 / 12 for five days.

@Autotron You and I discussed your similar problem with your last grow but I don't recall what it took to get yours to full bloom? If memory serves, some slight reduction in light cycle didn't do it so it took 12 / 12? I think we felt you ended up with a full-on photoperiod, which could be / might be different from what I'm seeing....

@HemiSync @Waira @MedCzech any similar experiences with your past grows? I'm going to try mimicking F6's experience with light cycle, but your thoughts welcomed as well. Based upon F6's experience, I think there really IS such a thing as a "slow" auto? If it holds full bloom after returning to 18 / 6 that's confirmation.

Yeah, I was thinking your new plant sounds a lot like mine! Mine went something like 50-60 days before flowering. It's hard for me to decisively say that the reduction in light worked or if it took 12/12. I was pretty impatient at that point, so didn't give it too long on 18/6. If you are more patient than I was, I'd say give it a couple weeks on 18/6 or 16/8 and see if that does the trick. If you don't see anything convincing by then, I'd flip it to 12/12.
 
Yeah, I was thinking your new plant sounds a lot like mine! Mine went something like 50-60 days before flowering. It's hard for me to decisively say that the reduction in light worked or if it took 12/12. I was pretty impatient at that point, so didn't give it too long on 18/6. If you are more patient than I was, I'd say give it a couple weeks on 18/6 or 16/8 and see if that does the trick. If you don't see anything convincing by then, I'd flip it to 12/12.

Yeah, it comes back to me now... we were pretty well convinced yours was a photoperiod that made it into an auto order.
I too, am impatient, and don't want to wait too long, so starting tomorrow I'm going to start F6's solution & hoping for same / similar results. And trolling for comments from any of our other experienced growers that may have seen this.
BTW, I'm doubtful I also have a photoperiod accident seed; Fast Buds is auto-only. Excluding breeding stock, but I can't see seed production and breeding research getting a chance to get mixed up....
 
Yeah, it comes back to me now... we were pretty well convinced yours was a photoperiod that made it into an auto order.
I too, am impatient, and don't want to wait too long, so starting tomorrow I'm going to start F6's solution & hoping for same / similar results. And trolling for comments from any of our other experienced growers that may have seen this.
BTW, I'm doubtful I also have a photoperiod accident seed; Fast Buds is auto-only. Excluding breeding stock, but I can't see seed production and breeding research getting a chance to get mixed up....

Mine were from a maverick breeder that's name comes up occasionally, all the FB I grew were top notch!

Hope the fix works, I recall it was only 4 days of 12/12 so that might save you a day. See how you go

Edit, actually iirc it was weird, they didn't stretch or do anything in preflower just slowly, and I mean slowly got bigger without producing flower, will not be growing his again although it was quite pleasent!



6
 
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