dudey;3556435; said:
watts arent as important as the kelvin ratings on your bulbs
the way i understand it is.
saying kelvin rating is important is kinda misnomer, as kelvin is combonation of parts of spectrum of light output. and spectrum is important. spectrum is basically the wavelength. there are different photosynthetic pigments in plants that absorb different wavelengths of light. if the bulb you have only produces wavelengths of light the chloroplast cant use or only use a few of them the growth wont be good.
however watts are also such a misnomer, as actually lumens are important, lumens are a measurement of light output where watts are a measure of electricity used. however most lighting types have a comparable value of efficiency, excluding incandescent. the efficency is measured as lumens per watt. this is why we use a wpg recommendation or some other equation to recommend how much light is needed
so you need both enough lumens and the right spectrum or wavelengths of light.
plants basically convert light to cellular food.
so i find it helpful to think of lumens or watts as the amount of food. where the spectrum or wavelength is the type of food being consumed.
so to survive you need a certain amount of food, and the correct type of food(as not everything is nutritious or even digestible)