How far should CMH grow lights be from plants? Ceramic Metal Halide Grow Lights CMH lights were introduced in the 1980s, but with recent discoveries in horticulture research, it makes sense why many growers are utilizing this technology.The CRI of CMH's is around 90-92, close to the spectrum you get from the sun .The claim from CMH lovers is that your plants can enjoy a nearly full spectrum white light, very similar to natural sunlight that lasts longer than your HID counterpart. A CMH's Color Rendering Index (CRI) rating is pretty close to the sun. CRI is a measurement of how true colors stay when the light is set upon them. HPS grow lights are 20 - 30 (that's why it's all orange/yellow in your grow room during flowering) while Metal Halides are 60 - 65 (which is why there's a little bit of a blue tint in your growing area when you're vegging). CMH grow lights come in with a CRI rating of 90 - 92 making them only 8 points off from our most natural source of light. Right off the bat, once you turn on a CMH bulb at either 3,000k or 4,000k, you'll notice a more natural looking light spectrum. No strong orange and yellow hues like an HPS bulb, or the bright white and subtle blues from a Metal Halide. Why is that?Standard metal halide bulbs use a quartz arc tube whereas the CMH systems use ceramic, which lets the bulb get hotter to give you that perfect spectrum of light CMH's give off. Not only that, but there is less degradation to the bulb because of the stronger arc tube material- that means they last a lot longer than other HID bulbs out there.That's why it operates at much higher pressure than standard MH bulbs. The ceramic arc tube combined with a unique mixture of salts and halides in CMH's is what creates its broad spectrum. And in turn, gives growers the enhanced photosynthetic photon flux levels.An added bonus to the quality spectrum is their lower heat output and power consumption. Lower watts means a lower toll on your electricity bill, and with lower watts, we also have lower heat. One watt from a grow light creates four British Thermal Units (BTUs) of heat that need to be cooled. So in comparison, one 600w HPS grow light puts off 2,400 BTU 's whereas one 315 W CMH grow light puts off only 1,260 BTU's, which is almost less than half the HPS