Every thread like this gets to be a bit frustrating when a majority of the "anti led people" say pretty much the same thing. "Tried led, wasn't happy." This is not a valid argument.
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Yes, it is a valid argument, provided they also provide some info on their setup. I tried DIY LED and was not happy with the results, that is a simple fact. I used cool white, royal blue, and a handful of warm white LEDs...at the time(couple years ago) that was THE leds are here setup. I was surprised by the brightness, I expected them dim. The shimmer was nice. But I lost coral through bleaching, yet others thrived. I know the usual lines of the intensities and what not, ut I lost pretty hardy coral like pocillopora.
I tried it again with a cheap Chinese fixture(D120) that included "UV". This was on my anemone tank. The anemone did not move, it just looked "blah" health wise. A couple days after I went back to halides with that tank, it was out in full and looked great.
My experience has been that halides produce far better results than LEDs. You almost have to TRY to have halides fail. Any bulb on the reef market right now for the most part will work at least decently. With bulbs like Radium, there is pretty much unanimous success with them in growth and color. I cannot find that same consensus amongst any of the popular LED fixtures right now.
Try to instal some garbage MH unit made to light up roads at night over your tank and then come claim that MH sucks. You would be a laughing stock. Do the same thing with some rubbish LED and it is totally fine all of a sudden.
Because we all know what works with halides. Installing a street light over your tank will give wrong spectrum. Yet I hear CONSTANTLY that LEDs are here, and they work. OK......but they are still being ironed out, which is obvious at the endless mixed reviews of them. Dismissing the negative reviews of them as not valid serves little purpose. Negative reviews should be helping advance the LEDs to the point where they can work across the board with little problem, like halides. Crappy fixtures and ineffective setups need to be called out and analyzed some.
I do agree if the LED argument is "LEDs SCUK!!!" or "LEDs are a fad!!". We all know they are capable of growing coral, and they are here to stay with their power saving capabilities. But even the best fixtures right now are giving pretty mixed results. Why?