Metal halide grow lights create fantastic light under
which your plants will thrive. These grow lights are a HID, or
high-intensity discharge, light. They are small grow lamps that produce
a lot of light, and yet are more efficient to run than either
incandescent or fluorescent light bulbs. Indoor gardeners and
hydroponics enthusiasts get great results with their plants when they
use metal halide lights.
Metal halide lamps are made up of
several different parts. There are tungsten electrodes which are
connected to a quartz arc tube, where the light is produced. Inside the
arc tube is where you will find mercury vapor, different metals and
noble gas, all of which play a part in creating the light produced by
MH grow lights. The arc tube is covered by a glass bulb. There is a
metal base, and a connection to the power source. Some metal halide
grow lights use an arc tube made of alumina or aluminum oxide, as well.
This type of grow light requires the use of a ballast to control the
flow of the current through the arc tube in order for the grow lamp to
function properly.
Each different type of grow light has a
particular color-rendering index and correlated color temperature. This
is true of the metal halide grow lights. Some of these lamps have an 80
color-rendering index, on a scale of zero to 100. This index ranks
lights to show how well or poorly they reproduce colors of objects
being lit by the lamp.
100 is the best rating, and zero the
worst. Therefore, an 80 is reflective of a very good quality white
light. In terms of correlated color temperature, MH grow lights
can range from 3,000 K to 20,000 K. 3,000 is in the yellow range of the
spectrum, while 20,000 is in the blue range. (K refers to the Kelvin
temperature scale.) In terms of comparison, daylight registers in at
6,500 K, whereas a television screen is at 9,300 K and moonlight is at
4,100 K. If you are an indoor gardener, you are trying to recreate
daylight in order for your plants to thrive, so you will want a bulb as
close to daylight's 6,500 K as possible.
Light produced by a grow lamp
can fall at different spots on the electromagnetic spectrum. Some
lights lean more toward the blue end of spectrum, while others land on
the orange and red end. This matters to the indoor gardener, because
baby plants need light in the blue spectrum in order to grow well. If
you want a mature plant to produce fruit or flowers, then you will need
lights in the red and orange spectrum.
Susan
Slobac has enjoyed hydroponics gardening for years now, and has
experimented with numerous types of grow lamps. She's had great success
using metal halide grow lights for her indoor gardening at home and as
part of her local gardening club.