When I was growing with multiple HIDs (been a good while), I felt that I got the best product with a mix of MH and HPS in approximately the ratio I mentioned. Yield probably suffered a small amount compared to a straight HPS (during flower) run, but it wasn't enough to bother me or notice, really; I had crops of nice, tight buds that were completely covered with trichomes. I feel the MH added to that.
But it's not a requirement, of course. We can do fine without having every single thing tweaked - and in many cases, "fine" is enough, lol.
I noticed you mentioned the low heat of CFLs twice in a post, above. That's one of the things I meant when I discussed comparing different lights on a "watt per watt" basis. Sure, you can hold a CFL in your hand. Think the last one I hit with my non-contact thermometer (was a higher wattage but still a CFL) was only around 135°F-150°F. No big deal, and way less than, say, a 400-watt HPS bulb in use. But you can set up two completely sealed boxes, one with X watts of CFLs and the other with equal watts of HPS. You'll find that the one with the CFLs heats up quicker and to a higher maximum temperature. It's that old law about... I can't remember what it's called right now (got hit with a piece of hash earlier, please forgive, lol). But the one that says when a light bulb consumes electricity, it produces two things, light and heat. The more efficient light - that is, the one that produces more light per watt - must produce less heat. Add to that the fact that the HID ballasts are usually located outside of the grow room, while CFL ballasts are almost always located right there under the glass part of the bulb, so their heat gets added in. Finally, since the amount of CFL watts required to get an equal amount of illumination as an efficient HID bulb - especially one that has a decent PAR spectrum instead of being primarily for area-lighting - is much higher, actually approaching double in some cases, well... If one ends up with more watts of a less efficient type of light (to do the same job), that's even more heat. And it's a lot easier to remove the heat generated by a HID setup; just use a sealed air-cooled reflector. Harder to do that with numerous bulbs that are all over the place. (And, again, one low-wattage CFL produces less heat than a higher-wattage HID, but folks aren't growing/flowering with one low-wattage CFL.)
I'll give you the lower cost for CFLs over HIDs. <SHRUGS> I guess. I'm not really sure, it's been a while since I priced things out. Like you mentioned, there are deals on CFLs and occasionally offers of free ones and you don't get that with HIDs. Then again, I've gotten free "industrial" HIDs that I only had to separate the ballast from or run by the local electrical supply house and spend $17 on a capacitor to make good as new.
But if a person had to buy everything for a decent-sized CFL grow from scratch, I wonder what they'd spend? Let's see, they'd buy lots of bulbs. Sockets. More sockets or Y-adaptors. Wire. Plugs. Something to mount them to or hang them from. Reflectors. The added expense of removing the extra heat generated (as per above) compared to an equal amount of HID lighting. Power strips (unless the person wired them all to either a single receptacle or a small number of them). That's probably about it.
Think I paid around $224 for a 400-watt Lumatek (drives MH or HPS bulbs in both 400- and 250-watt), a 400-watt Lumatek "high-PAR" HPS bulb, a generic MH bulb, and a cheap reflector. (And by cheap I mean cheaply-made as well as being inexpensive; it's an open style, not air-cooled.)
That's expensive, I guess. But an equal amount of CFL lighting, hmm. Take into account the lesser penetration of CFLs and you'd probably approach 800 watts. What's it cost to build a CFL setup of 800 watts from scratch? Or even 600 watts?
And how do the lower wattage CFL setups compare in price to a 250-watt setup? Or a 150-watt (or 175-watt MH)? 70-watt?
I'm just guessing here, but you'd probably still come out a few $ (or £, as the case may be) ahead buying the CFL stuff.
Until you paid your first electric bill, lol.
I guess since you mentioned that CFLs might take longer than HIDs - something I forgot to even consider - that we should probably consider the "yield vs. time" argument as well. I know people that only grow once per year because they don't require a great deal of cannabis and use 400-watt HID setups & have really nailed the one-gram-per-watt thing - and a ~14¼ ounce harvest suits them just fine for 12 months. You might grow using less overall wattage (even when considering any cooling/fans that you might or might not use) and get less than 400 grams yield at harvest time, but grow more than one crop per year. So you could end up getting a significant harvest when considered on a total yearly basis (probably using more watts of electricity in that year, but maybe not significantly, IDK).
Then again, when comparing multiple harvests with one larger single one, we would have to take into account the (likely) extra time/labor and materials.
Guess things are never simple clear-cut yes/no type answers, lol.
What it comes down to in the end is "as long as everyone is happy with their setup and it's producing the meds that they need, that's the main thing."
BtW... I think I saw you refer to this thread as a journal (I could be mistaken.) It's not. This is the Frequently Asked Questions forum.
And sorry for rambling. It's not my fault, lol; blame it on the hash. It's really good. (Coming unexpectedly during a rather sad dry spell probably helps.)
But it's not a requirement, of course. We can do fine without having every single thing tweaked - and in many cases, "fine" is enough, lol.
I noticed you mentioned the low heat of CFLs twice in a post, above. That's one of the things I meant when I discussed comparing different lights on a "watt per watt" basis. Sure, you can hold a CFL in your hand. Think the last one I hit with my non-contact thermometer (was a higher wattage but still a CFL) was only around 135°F-150°F. No big deal, and way less than, say, a 400-watt HPS bulb in use. But you can set up two completely sealed boxes, one with X watts of CFLs and the other with equal watts of HPS. You'll find that the one with the CFLs heats up quicker and to a higher maximum temperature. It's that old law about... I can't remember what it's called right now (got hit with a piece of hash earlier, please forgive, lol). But the one that says when a light bulb consumes electricity, it produces two things, light and heat. The more efficient light - that is, the one that produces more light per watt - must produce less heat. Add to that the fact that the HID ballasts are usually located outside of the grow room, while CFL ballasts are almost always located right there under the glass part of the bulb, so their heat gets added in. Finally, since the amount of CFL watts required to get an equal amount of illumination as an efficient HID bulb - especially one that has a decent PAR spectrum instead of being primarily for area-lighting - is much higher, actually approaching double in some cases, well... If one ends up with more watts of a less efficient type of light (to do the same job), that's even more heat. And it's a lot easier to remove the heat generated by a HID setup; just use a sealed air-cooled reflector. Harder to do that with numerous bulbs that are all over the place. (And, again, one low-wattage CFL produces less heat than a higher-wattage HID, but folks aren't growing/flowering with one low-wattage CFL.)
I'll give you the lower cost for CFLs over HIDs. <SHRUGS> I guess. I'm not really sure, it's been a while since I priced things out. Like you mentioned, there are deals on CFLs and occasionally offers of free ones and you don't get that with HIDs. Then again, I've gotten free "industrial" HIDs that I only had to separate the ballast from or run by the local electrical supply house and spend $17 on a capacitor to make good as new.
But if a person had to buy everything for a decent-sized CFL grow from scratch, I wonder what they'd spend? Let's see, they'd buy lots of bulbs. Sockets. More sockets or Y-adaptors. Wire. Plugs. Something to mount them to or hang them from. Reflectors. The added expense of removing the extra heat generated (as per above) compared to an equal amount of HID lighting. Power strips (unless the person wired them all to either a single receptacle or a small number of them). That's probably about it.
Think I paid around $224 for a 400-watt Lumatek (drives MH or HPS bulbs in both 400- and 250-watt), a 400-watt Lumatek "high-PAR" HPS bulb, a generic MH bulb, and a cheap reflector. (And by cheap I mean cheaply-made as well as being inexpensive; it's an open style, not air-cooled.)
That's expensive, I guess. But an equal amount of CFL lighting, hmm. Take into account the lesser penetration of CFLs and you'd probably approach 800 watts. What's it cost to build a CFL setup of 800 watts from scratch? Or even 600 watts?
And how do the lower wattage CFL setups compare in price to a 250-watt setup? Or a 150-watt (or 175-watt MH)? 70-watt?
I'm just guessing here, but you'd probably still come out a few $ (or £, as the case may be) ahead buying the CFL stuff.
Until you paid your first electric bill, lol.
I guess since you mentioned that CFLs might take longer than HIDs - something I forgot to even consider - that we should probably consider the "yield vs. time" argument as well. I know people that only grow once per year because they don't require a great deal of cannabis and use 400-watt HID setups & have really nailed the one-gram-per-watt thing - and a ~14¼ ounce harvest suits them just fine for 12 months. You might grow using less overall wattage (even when considering any cooling/fans that you might or might not use) and get less than 400 grams yield at harvest time, but grow more than one crop per year. So you could end up getting a significant harvest when considered on a total yearly basis (probably using more watts of electricity in that year, but maybe not significantly, IDK).
Then again, when comparing multiple harvests with one larger single one, we would have to take into account the (likely) extra time/labor and materials.
Guess things are never simple clear-cut yes/no type answers, lol.
What it comes down to in the end is "as long as everyone is happy with their setup and it's producing the meds that they need, that's the main thing."
BtW... I think I saw you refer to this thread as a journal (I could be mistaken.) It's not. This is the Frequently Asked Questions forum.
And sorry for rambling. It's not my fault, lol; blame it on the hash. It's really good. (Coming unexpectedly during a rather sad dry spell probably helps.)