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Reddit mentions of SANSI 36W Daylight LED Plant Light Bulb Full Spectrum Ceramic LED Grow Light Blub, E26 Plant Bulb Sunlight White Grow Light for Indoor Garden Farming Greenhouse Grow Walls, UV IR E26

Sentiment score: 14
Reddit mentions: 20

We found 20 Reddit mentions of SANSI 36W Daylight LED Plant Light Bulb Full Spectrum Ceramic LED Grow Light Blub, E26 Plant Bulb Sunlight White Grow Light for Indoor Garden Farming Greenhouse Grow Walls, UV IR E26. Here are the top ones.

SANSI 36W Daylight LED Plant Light Bulb Full Spectrum Ceramic LED Grow Light Blub, E26 Plant Bulb Sunlight White Grow Light for Indoor Garden Farming Greenhouse Grow Walls, UV IR E26
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No lampshades needed--- Compared with other grow lights with wider beam divergence which need lampshades, SANSI LED Grow lights produce a directional light that is aimed at the plants to avoid light loss.Easy to Install --- Operates like a light bulb with a standard E26 socket with no special lamp-base necessary. Recommended coverage area up to about 4.20 sq. ft. mounted 18”-24” above the plants with varying lighting schedules dependent on the plant(s) being grown.Full Spectrum --- Each SANSI LED chip has an evenly distributed spectrum between 400-780nm. Instead of having multiple LED chips with individual colors (white, blue, red, far red), each LED chip has a mix of each color giving off a whitish glow.Ceramic LEDs vs. Aluminum LEDs--- Compared with other grow lights (all competitors use aluminum LEDs), ceramic dissipates heat more efficiently than aluminum because it is non-conducive. This allows our LED chips to be mounted directly to ceramic; making each chip free of fans, housing, adhesive, and PC boards. Ceramic modules have fewer parts than conventional LEDs, and therefore conduct less heat and generate more savings.What You Get --- 5-year unlimited warranty; 30 days no question asked return policy; 24/7 friendly customer support
Specs:
Color36w
Height6.65 inches
Length5.16 inches
Number of items1
Size1 Count (Pack of 1)
Weight0.79 Pounds
Width5.16 inches

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Found 20 comments on SANSI 36W Daylight LED Plant Light Bulb Full Spectrum Ceramic LED Grow Light Blub, E26 Plant Bulb Sunlight White Grow Light for Indoor Garden Farming Greenhouse Grow Walls, UV IR E26:

u/Tio_De_Las_Plantas · 7 pointsr/haworthia

I was confused by etiolation at first. I looks like vigorous growth at first.

This bulb has done wonders for my light needy plants (I don't work for them, just a fan of their product)

u/hatts · 4 pointsr/IndoorGarden

You have a lot of VERY tolerant plants. All of the snake plants, the rubber plant, prayer plant, and ZZ are fine where they are. Like the other commenter said, put the fig right at the window.

Don't get a lamp until some of the plants start proving that they need it. If you do need one, go with this bulb in a basic clamp light setup. This can be kind of an eyesore though.

u/HonkMafa · 3 pointsr/Hydroponics

Here it is just prior to harvest, showing the 3 buttercrunch plants, the lamp, and the 3 romaine ports covered with foil. I may have re-positioned the lamp a bit because I was trying to move things around in there, but that is how close it was. There is another light off to the right over my carrot "crop."

​

Here it is in early April (first pic).

Buttercrunch on the right, Romaine on the left (I rotated the tote at some point). Color a bit washed out due to lamps. The little lettuce plant off to the right in dirt was sprouted the same day as the others and was watered with same nutes, just plainly not growing as fast as those in hydro. I still have it and it is still pretty sad.

Romaines were harvested twice before they started giving up. I removed them, covered up those 3 holes and let the buttercrunch have the whole thing for the last few weeks.

​

Here is the tote.

Hope that covers everything!

u/Arctic172nd · 3 pointsr/IndoorGarden

I'm using this lamp cord with this grow light and these smart outlets for my monstera. Granted its a new addition so I dont have time to say if it works but I dont see why it wont. I have it around 2-3 feet above its upper most leaves and fashioned a shade out of black paper my wife had (its VERY bright). The outlets let me set a timer or turn it on and off remotely for whatever reason.

u/brian15co · 3 pointsr/Bonsai

Extremely interested. I am preparing for my first winter here in colorado.

I am looking at the following

u/Chuntzy · 3 pointsr/gardening

I bought this one from amazon.

SANSI 40W Daylight LED Plant Light Bulb Full Spectrum Ceramic LED Grow Light Blub, E26 Plant Bulb Sunlight White Grow Light for Indoor Garden Farming Greenhouse Grow Walls, UV&IR, 90-132V

https://www.amazon.com/SANSI-Daylight-Spectrum-Ceramic-Vegetative/dp/B07BRKG7X1/ref=mp_s_a_1_7?ie=UTF8&qid=1549175051&sr=8-7&pi=AC_SX236_SY340_QL65&keywords=sansi+led+bulb&dpPl=1&dpID=415mBFZJf-L&ref=plSrch

u/Cataractarum · 3 pointsr/houseplants

I also deal with SAD and the lights in my apartment play a huge role how I manage it during the winter.

For plants, look for bulbs that are between 4000-6000K. Kelvin (K) measures color temperature (how warm or cool a light color is). Daylight is roughly between 4500K-6500K.

You'll also want to pay attention to the lumens (lm). Lumens measures how bright/intense a light is. Look for something between 2000lm-4000lm. Lumens is measured closest to the bulb and the intensity of the light reduces drastically the further a plant is from the light source. Higher light plants will prefer being directly under the bulb while lower light plants can be further way (like 2-3ft away :p).

I've been using these. I saw in the reviews that people are successfully using these lights with cacti and succulents. They've been working well for my plants (monstera, cat palm, pilea, scindapsus, sanseverias, etc.) and I love how bright my plant corner is.

u/BeefcatSnax · 2 pointsr/houseplants

>https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B07BRKG7X1/ref=psdcmw\_14252951\_t2\_B07KXBY2YH

Thanks! This might be what I've been looking for! I have a few lamps without shades, so this may work. Thank You!

u/ghoulapool · 2 pointsr/Citrus

These are the grow lights, I don't think I can post another photo into a reddit post - but I may just not know how. These days the plants are entirely inside, in my garage, with no natural lights.

u/oilxxx · 2 pointsr/houseplants

True full spectrum. So a nice daylight color, not blurple.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07BRKG7X1/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_RZwYDbRPT0PK7



More expensive. Same bright daylight color. More powerful.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07T47G2L2/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_z3wYDbJABYHY8

u/Ron_Fuckin_Swanson · 2 pointsr/houseplants

If you are just going to use a clamp light...I highly recommend this style of clamp grow light on Amazon

In terms of bang for your buck, these are fantastic. They throw a lot of light, and its a nice warm white as opposed to the pink/purple that a lot of grow lights put off. They do get a little warm to the touch (like a dimmed down incandescent light bulb) on the back when they are on...so if kids or pets may be an issue, you might want to go with the long slender tube style grow lights you can find on Amazon as those don't get warm at all. They aren't as bright, but they don't get hot.

The one caveat with this particular light is it doesn't have a timer built in. But I actually prefer that. You can use a simple appliance timer that you can get at any big box home improvement store...or...you can use WIFI outlet plugs that are app controlled from your phone. These have built in timer functionality.

I prefer using the wifi plugs because it gives me more control. Like..say its the summer time, and you don't have your lights running all that much or at all. But, a big day of thunderstorms runs through. You can open the app, turn on the light, and set a countdown timer and the light will turn off after say 6 hours.

There are a lot of grow lights with built in timers on Amazon...but the way those work is say...you turn the light on at 10AM and set it to 8 hours. Well, every day its going to come on at 10AM and run for 8 hours now. That might be all well and good, but what if you stay home sick? Or it's the weekend and you want to use the room without a grow light blaring in your face. Or what if it's a holiday and you don't want the bright light bugging you?

Also...If you are ever in the market for an LED bulb style grow light, SANSI makes the best. This 24 watt grow light is bright as can be. I have one mounted on a tripod speaker stand that I can move around the house to add supplemental light should it be required.

Currently I have one pointed down at some oxalis bulbs that I have growing so that they get a steady 8 hours of direct light per day to help speed up the starting process.

u/rooorooorawr · 2 pointsr/houseplants

For a very wide palm, I'd use 2 grow lights, each angled at it from above. However, if you hang a strong enough light up to 24" directly above, it should still benefit. The lower fronds would naturally receive dappled light anyway. I'd monitor it for etiolation, then maybe decide if I want 2 lights instead.

It's true that the bulbs must be quite close to the plants. 24" is as far as I would go. LED lights can be a bit farther away than fluorescent. I use 40 watt LED grow lights to supplement sunlight. Even my plants that sit over 24" away appear to benefit. The closest plants grow the best, though. My lights are in a clamp light and a normal lamp.

I use this one, as I prefer white light:

https://www.amazon.com/SANSI-Daylight-Spectrum-Sunlight-Greenhouse/dp/B07BRKG7X1/ref=mp_s_a_1_3?crid=31BY0GSV495O8&keywords=sansi+grow+light&qid=1556076681&s=gateway&sprefix=sansi+grow&sr=8-3

Edited to add: light reflection makes a huge difference. A silver or white reflector would reduce wasted light. My clamp light reflects the light with its aluminum shade. My lamp has a white shade interior.

u/dillishis · 2 pointsr/GrowingMarijuana

If anyone would like to chime in, this is the grow light I’ve been using.

It gets full morning sun for about three-four hours and then I move it into a spare room and it stays under that.

u/unimportanthero · 2 pointsr/Bonsai

I have been growing a bunch of different plants at my cubicle desk at work - which means nowhere near enough sunlight even for a spider plant - and that includes quite a few cottonwood seedlings who are all doing very well.

I use an LED grow light at home and and the office desk that does a lot for plants.

>Bulb: https://www.amazon.com/SANSI-Daylight-Spectrum-Sunlight-Greenhouse/dp/B07BRKG7X1/
>
>Lamp: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00HX2EVPS/

It is a full spectrum light that is in the same range as natural sunlight. It has been perfect for me, every plant I have put under it has started putting out new growth almost right away and bends toward it just like they do with the sun. (Which is how I am getting interesting curves in my seedlings.)

You do need to keep the lamp about 16 to 18 inches from the plant to get the full amount of light for it though, but it will not put off any amount of heat worth worrying about.

u/70ms · 1 pointr/Bonsai

After a different LED bulb with terrible heat dissipation nearly caught on fire, I'm trying this one out:

https://smile.amazon.com/SANSI-Daylight-Spectrum-Gardening-Residential/dp/B07BRKG7X1

The spectrum seems more toward the 5000k side, but I'm pretty impressed with the spread and intensity. It actually looks like my catlin elm is sitting in its own pool of sunlight. I have a fair bit of experience with lighting for a saltwater tank & macroalgae refugium and so far I'm happy with this for the tree. The LEDs are a blend of:

Blue (400-499nm) 19.46%
Green (500-599nm) 37.70%
Red (600-699nm) 36.23%
Far Red (700-780nm) 6.61%
PPF 98.28μmol/s

Heat dissipation seems to be great as well. Hope that helps.

I'm in SoCal and feeling you on the heat - we have some cool weather right now, but summer is rearing its head. :( My garden beds have been empty for the past 3 seasons because I just cannot for the life of me keep them from drying out!

u/ultrahello · 1 pointr/SavageGarden

I have a nice Sansi 36W link. My current setup uses 6 13W daylight Jungle Dawn LED. They are about a foot from my phalaenopsis orchids and pings. They are about 15” from a massive nepenthen that’s loving them. 36W should be totally fine or even on the low side.

u/King_of_Anything · 1 pointr/Citrus

It depends on quite a few factors, though the two most important ones are probably the indoor location and whether you want your plant to continue fruiting during winter.

Because I house my lemon tree in a living room, I personally like full-spectrum LEDs that mimic sunlight best (i.e. none of that blurple BS which is very hard on the eyes). My current setup uses a 36W Sansi Full Spectrum LED (which is equivalent to a 200W incandescent).

If your plant is right beside a south/southwest-facing window (almost touching the glass), you can probably get away with a lower-energy bulb (but I don't have personal experience with this). The same holds true if you don't mind the plant going dormant and not fruiting or flowering during the winter months. This lady in Toronto is using a 30W LED for her citrus to keep her citrus alive with no other major light sources, as an example.

u/Glarmj · 1 pointr/Bonsai

If you really can't put it outside, I'd place it in the sunniest part of the room and install something like this above it https://www.amazon.com/SANSI-Daylight-Spectrum-Ceramic-Vegetative/dp/B07BRKG7X1

u/adoreyou · 1 pointr/succulents

I asked a similar question the other day (sorry), but I don't feel like I have a good grasp on which light I should get... I've looked through the overwinter thread and tried to do even more research but I'm still feeling unsure.

Plan to get succulents for indoor. They won't get much light from the window that is nearby. Don't know what kind of succulents I'll be getting yet specifically, but hoping for pink. Out of these three LEDs, which would be best? They seem a bit similar to me but since I'm new and feeling overwhelmed with lighting, I would like some extra opinions.

Option 1 - 35w

Option 2 - 25w

Option 3 - 36w

Thank you!