💡 Lighting ⭐ intermediate

Keep the dark phase light-tight and interference-free

Keep the dark phase light-tight and interference-free – GrowPilot.guide

This guide shows you how to recognize, evaluate and eliminate light leaks in indoor growing so that photoperiod plants flower reliably and are not irritated by interfering light.

## Introduction


A clean **dark phase** is a central part of light control for **photoperiodic cannabis plants**. While **18/6** or similar long light cycles are usually used in the vegetation phase, photoperiod strains switch to **12 hours of light and 12 hours of uninterrupted darkness** for flowering. It is precisely this undisturbed dark phase that determines whether flowering is initiated and maintained in a stable manner.


This guide deals **exclusively with the subject of interfering light and light density** indoors. **Autoflower varieties do not require a 12/12 flip**, as they flower on a timed basis. Nevertheless, they also benefit from a consistent light schedule without unnecessary interruptions.


## Why light leaks are problematic


Photoperiodic plants respond to **durations of uninterrupted darkness**. Short pulses of light during the night phase can affect the plant's phytochrome system. In practical terms this means:


- the **initiation of flowering** can be delayed

- plants can react **inconsistently** to 12/12

- flowering can be interrupted or become unstable

- in sensitive cases, the risk of **stress reactions** increases


The decisive factor is not only the brightness of a leak source, but also


- **duration** of exposure

- **frequency** of occurrence

- **Distance** to the plant

- **Spectrum** of the interfering light


Particularly critical are recurring light sources that occur **every dark phase**, such as control LEDs, leaking zippers or extraneous light when entering the room.


## Typical sources of stray light


Most light leaks do not occur at the main lamp, but at small, overlooked sources:


- LED indicators on **socket strips**, timers or power supplies

- Light gaps on **tent zippers**

- Leaky **cable bushings**

- Window light from adjacent rooms or from outside

- Light under doors

- Displays of humidifiers, controllers or measuring devices

- short light pulses from opening the tent during the dark phase


Even small sources can be relevant if they directly affect the stock or are regularly present for weeks.


## Check light leaks correctly


### 1st test always in real dark phase


Only test light leaks if it makes sense to do so:


- the main lighting is off

- the room is as dark as possible

- your eyes have had **5 to 10 minutes** to adjust to the darkness


Then walk slowly around the tent or grow room and pay attention to every visible line of light.


### 2. combine indoor and outdoor test


Two test methods are particularly useful:


- **Exterior test:** Light in the tent on, room dark. This allows you to see where light escapes to the outside.

- **Internal test:** Tent dark, room dark. This allows you to see where light is leaking in.


Where light escapes in one direction, there is usually also a potential entry point.


### 3. prioritize critical points


Check first:


- Zippers

n- Cable ports

- Ventilation openings

- Door gaps

- Device displays at plant height


Light at the height of the flower tips is more relevant than weak scattered light far below the leaf canopy.


## Effectively eliminate light leaks


### Zippers and seams


- Check that the zipper closes completely.

- If necessary, use **lightproof fabric tape** on the outside of problematic areas.

- If the seams are badly worn, the only remedy is often a permanent cover or replacement of the affected part.


### Cable and hose feedthroughs


- Tighten drawstrings correctly.

- Route cables through openings in bundles instead of loosely.

- Seal residual gaps with light-tight material without crushing cables.


### Device LEDs and displays


- Cover control LEDs with **black, opaque tape**.

- Turn displays away from the plants.

- If possible, place illuminated devices **outside** the grow area.


### Doors, windows, ambient light


- Use door seals or draught excluders to keep light out from under doors.

- Cover windows so that they are completely light-proof.

- Avoid corridor, street or work light falling into the grow room.


## Avoid timers and operating errors


Not every interfering light is a leak in the material. It is often **light interruptions due to operation or technology**:


- inaccurate or faulty timers

- accidental switching on of work light

- Opening the tent in the dark phase

- Different switching times after a power failure


Therefore


- Use **reliable timers**.

- Check the switching times regularly.

- Do **not** open photoperiodic plants in the dark phase during 12/12 if possible.

- Plan work consistently in the light phase.


## Conclusion


A light-tight dark phase is not a detail, but a cornerstone of lighting for photoperiod cannabis. When running 12/12, the night phase should be **truly dark and uninterrupted**. Small, permanent sources of leakage are often more problematic than many growers realize. If you systematically check zippers, cable ports, device LEDs and timers, you will create stable conditions for clean flowering.


## Pro Tips

- Autoflowers do not need a 12/12 light change.

- Check for light leaks after 10 minutes of dark adaptation.

- Cover the status LEDs with black tape.

- In 12/12 mode, only work in the light phase.

- Check the timer again after power failures.

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