Whats the ideal exposure for a product thats going to be placed eventually into an aquarium?
Sun lit out on the reef?
Sun lit in a green house on land?
In the shadows of a jumbo jet at the wholesalers?
Or under artifical light ?
There has been some discusion about the use of 1000 watt bulbs in other threads so I thought I would give the subject its own Thread.
We switched to 1000 watt 20 k on our SPS Clams and anemones about a year ago. We have ten plus 1000 watt bulbs blasting away.
What we found is that bulbs burning at 20 k are very inefficient
We have used a light meter to measure three 400 watt bulbs vrs one 1000 watt blasters and it wasnt even close. Its almost twice the Par in favor of the 1000 watter .
With 6500k the par per watt is about even for 400 and 1000 watt bulbs . Its the blue color bulbs that tilt the comparison.
Most SPS growers agree that blue l
ight colors up polyps better ..... both on the reef and in the Aquarium.
The biggest issue for us is not more intensity then 400 watt bulbs but heat transfer to the water and less chillers. You want to lose money growing corals ........find yourself using Chillers!
With the par starved 400 watt bulbs you need to place the bulbs too close to the water thus heat build up in the water.
With the 1000 watt bulbs we can raise the bulbs three feet off the water line and limit the heat transfer.
Also by placing the bulbs so high up, the amount of surface that is lit by one bulb is increased well beyond that of three 400 watt bulbs .
As for what or {Watt} happens after the corals leave the illumination of the 1000 watt bulbs and are placed into the home aquarium .........We have found that even 175 0r 250 watt bulbs can keep the color up as long as the coral is placed close enough to the new less intense light source.
The actual exposure using a 1000 watt bulb at four feet is about the same as a 250 watt bulb at six inches.
Its just that to use 250 watt bulbs on a large scale it would take eight bulbs to shead the same span as
...............one 1000 watt "light of God " As Eric Boreman likes to call his 1000 watt beast.
Just dont get the bright idea of putting one on your 12 gallon .
Although the daily evaporation on such a lit tank would enable quite a lot of Kalkwasser replacement water !
Sun lit out on the reef?
Sun lit in a green house on land?
In the shadows of a jumbo jet at the wholesalers?
Or under artifical light ?
There has been some discusion about the use of 1000 watt bulbs in other threads so I thought I would give the subject its own Thread.
We switched to 1000 watt 20 k on our SPS Clams and anemones about a year ago. We have ten plus 1000 watt bulbs blasting away.
What we found is that bulbs burning at 20 k are very inefficient
We have used a light meter to measure three 400 watt bulbs vrs one 1000 watt blasters and it wasnt even close. Its almost twice the Par in favor of the 1000 watter .
With 6500k the par per watt is about even for 400 and 1000 watt bulbs . Its the blue color bulbs that tilt the comparison.
Most SPS growers agree that blue l
ight colors up polyps better ..... both on the reef and in the Aquarium.
The biggest issue for us is not more intensity then 400 watt bulbs but heat transfer to the water and less chillers. You want to lose money growing corals ........find yourself using Chillers!
With the par starved 400 watt bulbs you need to place the bulbs too close to the water thus heat build up in the water.
With the 1000 watt bulbs we can raise the bulbs three feet off the water line and limit the heat transfer.
Also by placing the bulbs so high up, the amount of surface that is lit by one bulb is increased well beyond that of three 400 watt bulbs .
As for what or {Watt} happens after the corals leave the illumination of the 1000 watt bulbs and are placed into the home aquarium .........We have found that even 175 0r 250 watt bulbs can keep the color up as long as the coral is placed close enough to the new less intense light source.
The actual exposure using a 1000 watt bulb at four feet is about the same as a 250 watt bulb at six inches.
Its just that to use 250 watt bulbs on a large scale it would take eight bulbs to shead the same span as
...............one 1000 watt "light of God " As Eric Boreman likes to call his 1000 watt beast.
Just dont get the bright idea of putting one on your 12 gallon .
Although the daily evaporation on such a lit tank would enable quite a lot of Kalkwasser replacement water !