How AC Infinity's UIS Ecosystem Fits Together
Every grow tent, inline fan, LED panel, humidifier, dehumidifier, heater, and climate sensor in the AC Infinity catalog runs on the same UIS protocol. One
Smart Controller schedules lighting, ventilation, and climate as a single closed loop, which is why most growers end up with three or four AC Infinity components rather than just one. The decision tree starts with the tent footprint, then sizes every other piece to that plant count and canopy area.
Sizing Guide: Pick the Tent First, Then Size Everything Else
| Tent Footprint |
Plant Count |
Cloudline Fan |
LED Wattage |
| 2x4 |
2 |
S4 or S6 |
200-240W |
| 3x3 |
2-3 |
S6 (6 inch) |
240-280W |
| 4x4 |
4 |
S6 or T6 |
240-500W |
| 5x5 |
6 |
T6 (6 inch) |
400-500W |
| 4x8 |
6-8 |
T6 or T8 |
2x 240W panels |
| 8x8 |
12-16 |
T8 (8 inch) |
2x 730W panels |
| 10x10 |
16-20 |
T10 or T12 |
3x 1000W panels |
Product Family Map
I find the easiest way to navigate the AC Infinity lineup is by climate variable.
Cloudline fans handle airflow and exhaust,
Cloudlab tents handle the enclosure, Ionframe and Ionboard panels handle photosynthesis,
Cloudforge humidifiers and Hydrone dehumidifiers handle moisture, and Suncore mats plus Thermoforge heaters cover temperature. Spectron cameras and a Smart Controller log everything to the AC Infinity app.
For most first builds, I recommend starting with a complete
Advance Grow Tent System instead of buying components separately. The 4x4 kit bundles a Cloudlab 844 tent, Ionboard S33 LED, Cloudline T6 fan, carbon filter, and Smart Controller 69 Pro Plus for one footprint that runs as a closed loop on day one. For a hands-on look at how the build assembles, see this
inside look at the Cloudlab tent build.
Related Guides
If you're cross-shopping outside the brand, the broader
grow tents and
grow room controllers pages compare AC Infinity against Mars Hydro, Spider Farmer, TrolMaster, and other lines.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is AC Infinity worth it?
For sealed-environment indoor growers, yes. The UIS ecosystem means one Smart Controller manages every climate variable as a single closed loop. The build quality on the Cloudline EC-motor fans and the Cloudlab steel-frame tents holds up well over multiple grow cycles, which is the part that matters once a piece of gear is running 24/7 in a humid tent.
What is the UIS ecosystem?
UIS is AC Infinity's universal protocol that runs over a small RJ-style connector. Every UIS-compatible device (fans, lights, humidifiers, dehumidifiers, heaters) plugs into a single Smart Controller, which then runs the whole grow tent as one schedule. Non-UIS devices can still be controlled through a Smart Outlet adapter.
Does AC Infinity gear work with non-UIS equipment?
Yes, through Smart Outlets and Smart Plugs that read the Smart Controller's set points and switch any 120V device when conditions cross a threshold. The closed-loop sensor data still flows through the AC Infinity app, so a non-UIS dehumidifier or heater behaves like a UIS device on the schedule side.
Which AC Infinity tent should I buy first?
I'd start with a 4x4 if room allows. The Cloudlab 844 footprint fits 4 plants comfortably under one 240-500W panel, it's the most-covered size for replacement parts and accessories, and the matching 4x4 Advance Grow Tent System bundles every component for the same footprint with zero guesswork.
Does the Smart Controller require Wi-Fi?
No, the controllers run their schedule and sensor logic locally. Wi-Fi is only required to view sensor data and adjust schedules from the AC Infinity app remotely. If Wi-Fi drops, the schedule continues running from the controller's internal clock until power is cycled.
How long is AC Infinity's warranty?
The standard manufacturer warranty is 3 years on Cloudline fans and Cloudlab tents, 5 years on Ionframe and Ionboard LEDs, and 1 year on smaller accessories like clip-on fans and timers. Warranty terms are listed on each individual product page.
Are Cloudline fans louder than the competition?
No, the opposite. The Cloudline S and T series use EC motors that run quieter than the AC induction motors common in legacy inline fans. A T6 at 50 percent draws around 35 dB at the fan housing, roughly the noise floor of a quiet room, not a fan.