I think the idea behind this has gotten lost along the way somehow.
Capulator actually sort of makes the point here (albeit in a different way):
I use 600's and I consistently get 50% more fruit than a friend who runs exactly the same system with 1k's.
Obviously we're talking about two different processes--but the idea that sometimes you can get more yield with less light is the thing we're trying to probe here (I understand this was not the point you were making Cap--but it shows that if you don't hold everything constant, stuff changes). Ttystikk has suggested using a light rotator, and that may be an excellent way to save on electricity without sacrificing yield--but we won't know for sure until we look deeper and run some tests.
Now to make a definitive statement about cannabis as a whole we would be in for a great deal of testing--however if we look at strains individually, it should not be very difficult to get a good sample size. If
everyone were to do it this way ($20 instrument required)--we would eventually end up with a huge amount of strain-dependent data, which could be stratified and analyzed statistically that way. The point is there are routes open for this type of thing--"crowd-sourced" science depends on this type of analysis in many situations. I don't see why we can't apply it here.
What I think the major problem is here is the community is lacking direction in this area. People don't want to read research papers to find direction--and I understand that. I am slightly pedantic, but I like to believe I don't take it to a fault. Research papers aren't meant to
grab everyone, but that doesn't mean the applicable knowledge within them should stay forever lost to the MMJ community simply because our government has yet to pull its head out of its ass.
In real life here's what happens:
Scientific discovery
-----> Monetization (simplify/consumerize concept)
------> Marketing
------> Industry Acceptance (tipping point ~20-25% market penetration)
--------> Full utilization of discovery by industry (~100% market penetration, ubiquitous)
--------> Utilization for further discoveries.
Notice what comes second to last.
Our model looks like this (for the system we currently use).
Scientific discovery (19th century)
--------> Ignore it, its too hard and expensive (
its not)
--------> Use something easier to measure and understand which correlates to, but does not equal, the scientific discovery (i.e. use an inferior model)
--------> 100% market penetration (laziness, or
incorrectly assumed barrier to entry into the
known superior model)
--------> Learn by experience, not science
--------> Everyone present data differently
-------->New discoveries are questionable
--------> Bicker about it on the internet (everyone is wrong, or only partially correct--for the most part)
You don't get anything solid from this format. That is the muck this community-at-large (not Farm specific) has been muddled in since I became a member of it over a decade ago now. At the time I had no clue, but having been taught
both ways--first this way, and then a more exacting, although never perfect, method--I can say that you make discoveries more quickly, efficiently, and to a greater degree of accuracy and certainty with the latter method rather than the former. That's pretty much the entire point of it. New understanding is all-inclusive, it builds on older understanding.
If the understanding you have been generating is shaky and uncertain--you do not have a good base from which to build
even newer understanding. If science were heartily involved in
cannabis yield maximization research, then we may not have to consider any of this--because the best and brightest would be at work on it. It is not, and so we must (if we give a shit, and I think we do).
I believe our model should look like the following:
Scientific Discovery (19th century)
--------> Use it (20ish dollars)
--------> Standardize/centralize data reporting (app, website)
--------> Open data to everyone for analysis
--------> Profit (New discoveries, new synthesis of understanding)
--------> Laugh loudly at the fact people used to bicker about it.
TLDR version:
If you cant write out cannabis' genome, explain every gene and its function/purpose, and link all possible metabolic pathways correctly--then you don't know everything you can about the plant. It's more then likely that it's got a few surprises for you.
I know that was a short sentence of things to be able to do but some people hate to read :) Let's just look at explaining every gene for a second:
This explanation and understanding falls over 2 or 3 orders of magnitude of complexity. If the thing codes an enzyme: how much is it expressed? What are co-substrates? what inihibitors/activators? What type of the former? What's the mechanism? What's the substrate specificity? The max reaction velocity? Is there an equilibrium constant? What is it? How does this affect other enzymes? How do those enzymes affect this one? What mutations are allowed? Which are desirable/undesirable?
The list goes fucking on and on and on--for this tiny itty bitty little part of one piece of one gene, and this isn't the only thing genes can code for. However, all of the things all of the genes code for will interact.
It should be clear enough by now that the plant has made it difficult enough for us on its own to understand it. Why then should we be using an observation to probe greater understanding of the plant which we
know to be flawed (and have for probably 150 years)?
That doesn't sparkle with me.
Now I'm not here to deride anyone, and you won't see me jumping on anyone's back in a thread where they report flawed data; however, in a thread which is to discuss the concept in general--it suits me to discuss reality. You'll forgive me if it offends any of your sensibilities, but using logic to defend bad science is never, ever, going to work (especially if in your argument you concede the science is bad).
You can get in a broken car and shift the gears whilst mashing on the pedals as much as you'd like to--but it will not get you where you are going any faster (and it may slow you down considerably).
Or you can jump in the fuckin' limo which someone has already fixed up real nice for you and worry about what you're doing from point A to B rather than how to get there.
Ya'll can decide what situations I believe those two statements are analogous to.