Ballasts.
All of the above types of lights use some kind of a ballast system. The one most people
are familiar with is the fluorescent light. This has, a small, built in, ballast. It
allows the fluorescent tube to build up enough energy to strike, and excite the molecules
within the tube, causing light to be given off. Metal Halide and HPS grow lights are
usually run from remote ballasts. These are external boxes containing the electronics to
pre-heat and run the lamp. The ballast is connected to the lamp holder and to the mains
power supply. Each ballast used is rated for the lamp wattage and so it is necessary to
have different ballasts available for each of the different values of lamp to be used. HID
bulbs should be replaced after 12 to 18 months of use. Although HID lamps will continue to
light beyond 18 months of use, they will have lost up to 30 percent or more of their lumen
output while consuming the same amount of electricity.
Mercury Vapour Lights. Most of these lamps, up to a value of 500 watts, require no
additional ballast. You just screw them into the lamp holder supplied with your equipment.
Here is a word of warning about lighting.
There are an awful lot of companies out there selling lights for the hydroponics
enthusiast. As in all walks of life, there are good and bad suppliers and manufacturers of
lighting equipment. Always look for equipment made by a reputable company and backed by an
official testing scheme. (For example the C E mark in Europe means that the article is up
to European standards of safety and quality).
Cheap, nasty, home made, dangerous lights have dogged the hydroponics market for some
years. There are these kinds of light and there are well built, professional grade,
horticultural lights on today's market. The first are often death traps, being cobbled
together from the cheapest, obsolete, end of the line components that are usually
mismatched and wrongly configured.
To think that these poorly built, badly wired, misconfigured lights are being fitted in
damp, humid and sometimes even wet, grow rooms is a very scary thought indeed. The
installation of these poor quality, dangerous, lights in your home, where your family
lives and plays, is always a very grave risk. All this in the name of a bargain!
So dont risk your own life or the lives of those who live with you. Buy from a
reputable source! Lighting is possibly the most important decision for indoor
horticulture, cheap normally represents a health risk. For the sake of saving a relatively
small amount of money, is it really worth it?
You have been warned!
Copyright (C) 2004, 2005 J R Haughton.
--- All Rights Reserved ---
A partner in a thriving retail hydroponics supply business, Rickie Haughton is the
owner of hydroponics-gardening-information.com which aims to cater for all levels of
expertise in the field of hydroponics gardening. The website is packed with good content
about all aspects off hydroponics gardening and offers a free newsletter to all
subscribers.