A great refugium lightbulb, IMHO!

Anthony Calfo recommends the rolling action. I've had it growing stationary for the past couple of years, and even the part that is at the bottom is bright green when I lift it up to see how its doing.
 
I don't know much about lumens. I care about Kelvin, and to some degree PAR. PAR is the intensity, not that I have a way of measuring it myself.
 
Marc,
I've been having red algea problems in my fuge using this bulb. Has anybody run into this problem? My sump and main tank are fine, it just the fuge that gets covered with it. Any help is greatly appreciated.

Thanks,
Steve
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7100080#post7100080 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by steveoutlaw
Marc,
I've been having red algea problems in my fuge using this bulb. Has anybody run into this problem? My sump and main tank are fine, it just the fuge that gets covered with it. Any help is greatly appreciated.

Thanks,
Steve
I have as well...a fine, fuzzy red algae that grows on the glass walls and baffles in small clumps...only in my sump, not in the display. My bulb is pretty old though (8-10 months; not sure), and I was wondering if that may have something to do with it.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7100916#post7100916 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by steveoutlaw
...My fuge is also exposed to the light from my main tank.
Mine not...mine's isolated from ALL other light sources for 95+% of the time.
 
The "Red Algae" may be cyanobacteria, i.e. Red Tide. How are your phosphate levels? Phosphates are great for growing cyanobacteria.
 
Well I can report that my chaeto has not done well. I think it may be dead. It's looking very brown and has sunken to the bottom. If I stir the water ever so slightly, it floats/flies around everywhere. It's back to the drawing board for me. I'm going to try to find the light melev mentioned.

<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=6894088#post6894088 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by sales weasel
Guys, I did a search but only found one mention of the Philips Agro-Lite in another thread. I bought one of these at HD today along with the clamp-lite reflector. I can't find any data about this light other than what's on the box. The Philips site says it's unavailable. Maybe my HD just has lots of them leftover. Here are the specs I have from the box:
50w Agro-Lite Plant Light 120V
"For the Acceleration of Indoor Plant Growth"
2000HRS Avg Rated Life
Standard Base
R20 (2-1/2" Diameter)
Can't find anything about the actual kelving rating.
Has anyone used this light?
 
So how have these worked?

<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=6865162#post6865162 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by KingSpade
i just ordered 2 of these, do you think they will be comparible to the ones you use Marc???
 
the 5000K is awsome !! last night i was woken up by a tug on my foot. i rolled over and tried to go back to bed. then something grabed my leg and pulled me on to the floor. i jumped up and turned the lights on . to my suprise it was the dang cheato it is growing soo much that it grew right out of the sump , grew arms and even grew hands pulled me out of bed and said .. this 5000k light bulb really rocks..!!!!! ( being totally serious , great lightbulb for the money , and mine is on 24/7 and never even gets hot to the touch .. thanks .
 
Which bulb are you referring to? the one from HD?

<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7386796#post7386796 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by ray22
the 5000K is awsome !! last night i was woken up by a tug on my foot. i rolled over and tried to go back to bed. then something grabed my leg and pulled me on to the floor. i jumped up and turned the lights on . to my suprise it was the dang cheato it is growing soo much that it grew right out of the sump , grew arms and even grew hands pulled me out of bed and said .. this 5000k light bulb really rocks..!!!!! ( being totally serious , great lightbulb for the money , and mine is on 24/7 and never even gets hot to the touch .. thanks .
 
Please dont take this as a slam but maybe i can help a little here, PAR is acually the size of the Bulb, (though in some applications like home lighting, companies will tell you that Par is the Intensity) Lumens is the accual output of the bulb (Intensity) and Kelvin is the color temperature. I havent acually tried it on an aquarium, but you can place a filter (GEL) on your bulb that will change the color temp to the desired temp. Gel can be found at any production house in your town or can be ordered from www.internetapollo.com or leefilters.com. It is fairly inexpensive and you would get roughly 8 -- 10 cuts out of a sheet. You would have to replace the gel ever once and a while as it will burn thru after prolonged exposure. Let me know if you would like more info. I dont know why i never thought about doing this, it could make for a very inexpensive DIY sump light Cheers.
 
PAR is also used as an acronym for photosynthetic active radiation, or something like that. It refers to how much of a lights output actually supports plants.
 
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