Floyd R Turbo
Either busy or sleeping
I'm not even sure what statement you are referring to, went back a few months on thei thread and still don't know, and can't remember details from 2 weeks ago...so...apology accepted I guess!!
Looks like a well executed DIY project. :thumbsup:Please let me know what you think or if you see any areas I could improve on.
Looks like a well executed DIY project. :thumbsup:
Thanks!
How big is that tank? That's a LOT of light you are throwing. I know a watt is not a substitute for true measures of LED light thrown, but it's a quick substitute (for loose ball park discussions). And you've to more than one watt per square inch of screen. I've not been keeping up... is that the standard now?
The tank is 90 gallons with a 40 gallon sump, honestly I have read the thread a couple times and get more confused each time so I really do not know the true "standard" for watts per inch of screen.
Also, how/why did you decide on that particular mix/ratio of LEDs?
I read another post where someone had done the red and blue LEDs with those drivers and they worked well so I used that formula and threw in some whites just because. The whites may have to be removed or replaced with some more reds depending on the growth. I am still playing with how long to leave the lights on and if anybody has a suggestion I am all ears.
This tank is a new build and just a couple months old, I downsized from a 150 after it basically crashed while I was deployed for 7 months. I built the stand with a scrubber in mind and left myself plenty of room. So honestly I am not sure how much screen and light I need for best results. I feed around 2 cubes per day so I believe I have too much screen?
I have just a shade under one watt LED per square inch of screen myself. However, my LEDs are two years old. So your watts are working a lot (50%?) harder than my watts. Plus, I'm pretty sure I'm throwing too much light, because I consistently have burned spots in my algae matt. In fact, the matt extends several inches below the surface of the water. And while my LEDs are aimed at the matt above water, just the excess light that makes it to the algae under the water surface grows nice algae there. (Oh... I don't count that underwater mat as part of my watts/sq. in. calculation.)
20.How many hours per day are you leaving your lights on?
I honestly have no idea. It's T'ed off my return and restricted with a gate valve for fine tuning flow. But if I look at my matt, there is a constant stream of water running down every inch of it. And there is not so much water that you don't see the contours of the mat though - it does NOT look like a flat sheet of water. No, you see every ripple in the mat. They are quite visible. So I guess that means it's not a LOT of water, but WAY more than enough to keep the entire mat both soaked and constantly refreshed with new water.How many gallons per hour are you pumping?
Personally I think "cubes" is a softer metric than the watts/sq. in. of matt I was referencing earlier. No such thing as a standard cube size or standard content. But without a more specific way to measure nutrients coming into the system, it'll have to do. I don't use it for sizing.And finally, do you go by cubes fed per day for size or a different formula?
Well, as before, I did my sizing based on the early recommendations in this thread, then scaled it back to accommodate my low feeding. My bioload is high - don't scale by bioload. I've got a tank chock full of corals. You should size based on the amount of nutrients you put in. So I've got a reasonably high bioload (low fish load though) for a 33g. But I don't put many new nutrients in every day....I have a pretty big bioload in my tank and I have always battled nitrates (even in my 150) so I thought bigger would be better? If I went solely on cubes per day I believe my screen is oversized. Thanks
I would assume yes. But that also presumes that my problem is "hot spots", and not something else.Would the burned spots be able to be fixed by simply shortening the lighting period or adding a dimmable driver?.
I don't know about mirrors, but it's worth noting that I don't use any optics. And without mirror - or optics - a HUGE amount of that 1 watt per 1" sq. of screen is getting wasted. That probably helps explain why I have such nice underwater growth.I will be making the final lighting mounts utilizing mirrors to capture the light bleeding over so if I have too much light now, I will definately have too much then.
For me my real metric is nitrates and phosphates. I rarely measure them because they are consistently so good. But a couple of days ago I went to the trouble because I'm working on a refund from Drs. F&S on a sick coral they sent, and they wanted confirmation of "pristine" water conditions. Salifert tells me my NO3 is less than 0.2 ppm (their lowest measure), but present. And my Hanna meter said PO4 is 0.04 ppm.
I do run a skimmer; an SC-65 (since renamed as SCA-301 on eBay). A dirt cheap, hard working little nano skimmer. And I drop a bag of 1/2 cup high quality carbon (ROX) in my sump every two weeks. Plus I change something over 30% of my water each month. So it's not just the ATS. However, if we took the ATS out of the equation, I'd never have those solid nitrate/phosphate numbers.exactly. Out of curiosity, are you running a skimmer?, or scrubber only? Any other chemical reactors like carbon or GFO?
20.
As for the "is bigger better" question, I can only offer an opinion that I cannot back up with experience. That is... if a systems has the right amount of light for the screen, and the right water flow over the screen, building that screen bigger than conventional wisdom says is necessary will only spread the algae growth over a larger surface. So it will strip nutrients out of the water faster than a "correctly sized" system. That may cause you to reduce your photoperiod to keep from completely stripping the system of nutrients. And that's not a bad thing at all. Short answer - if the light and flow are appropriate to the screen size, having a screen that's too big is not a big deal.
I hope that helps.![]()
I would assume yes. But that also presumes that my problem is "hot spots", and not something else.
I don't know about mirrors, but it's worth noting that I don't use any optics. And without mirror - or optics - a HUGE amount of that 1 watt per 1" sq. of screen is getting wasted. That probably helps explain why I have such nice underwater growth.
exactly. Out of curiosity, are you running a skimmer?, or scrubber only? Any other chemical reactors like carbon or GFO?
Typically for hot-spots the most simple form of correction is to put more distance between the lights and screen. A relatively small amount of distance can make a difference.
On a side note - I mentioned before that I was piecing together a Ca Reactor and planned on plumbing it into my waterfall scrubber. I've been tuning in the reactor over the past week or more, and got her plumbed into the scrubber yesterday - so we'll see if the negative effects of each piece of equipment compliment and cancel each other. ( aka low pH from reactor, and DKH usage of waterfall scrubber )
I'll report back in a week or probably two.
As for the "is bigger better" question, I can only offer an opinion that I cannot back up with experience. That is... if a systems has the right amount of light for the screen, and the right water flow over the screen, building that screen bigger than conventional wisdom says is necessary will only spread the algae growth over a larger surface. So it will strip nutrients out of the water faster than a "correctly sized" system. That may cause you to reduce your photoperiod to keep from completely stripping the system of nutrients. And that's not a bad thing at all. Short answer - if the light and flow are appropriate to the screen size, having a screen that's too big is not a big deal.
It's my understanding that mirrors are not as effective reflectors as specular aluminum. Shiny aluminum. Each time the mirror reflects, the light has to pass through the glass two times.
For me my real metric is nitrates and phosphates. I rarely measure them because they are consistently so good. But a couple of days ago I went to the trouble because I'm working on a refund from Drs. F&S on a sick coral they sent, and they wanted confirmation of "pristine" water conditions. Salifert tells me my NO3 is less than 0.2 ppm (their lowest measure), but present. And my Hanna meter said PO4 is 0.04 ppm.
It's my understanding that mirrors are not as effective reflectors as specular aluminum. Shiny aluminum. Each time the mirror reflects, the light has to pass through the glass two times.
But I digress.
so I would not worry about reflectors or lenses on your LEDs. It is cheaper and easier to just add a few more LEDs.
Then, add in the other supplemental colors such as blue and whites, but I run all of these "secondary" colors at 50% current by wiring in a current divider sequence as I recently posted.
Also in conjunction with that, the larger the tank, IMO, the tank volume comes back into play as a secondary factor of sorts. The thought process here is that with a small feeding-based scrubber and high water volume, you have less "turnover" of the water volume in terms of percent of total volume per unit time. So once you get to about 150-200 gallons, start increasing the width of the scrubber to get higher turnover, or at least size the scrubber wider rather than taller.
Then there is the other factor that most don't really consider, and that is the diversity of life that the scrubber adds into the system.