I've always had a thing for naughty photons....
You can have NAUGHTY photons that come from LED's
I thought everybody knew that?
I've always had a thing for naughty photons....
You can have NAUGHTY photons that come from LED's
I thought everybody knew that?
Unlike LEDs are bad and MH/T5s are good?B... "Photon is a photon" is a simpleton argument IMO.
Blue light at 450 nm is blue light at 450 nm.
Except that LED tanks just don't have the coloration of comparable traditionally lit tanks. LED tech isn't there yet no matter how much the supporters want to make it seem like it is. I was a former LED supporter and user. Went back to MH and never looking back. P.S. I still have an LED fixture over my tank that I'm strictly using for a lunar cycle.
That is not true in my case, I ran metal halide for years and when I switched of to LEDs coral remained basically unchanged colorwise. I will say My 180 was run by 1200w of MH at the time. So switching to LEDs for me was probably not the shock that some others may have experienced. I was able to run my sols at around 70% from the beginning with no problems.
I added the full spectrum lights since I could not grow a millie or do very well with dragons. Well the 3 months of halide helped the millie but did nothing for the dragons. So its not the lights in every case.
The par readings with the sols alone are about 950 at the top of the tank and 350 to 400 at the bottom. These were taken 3 years ago with the lights lower to the tank then I run them now.
You cannot make judgement about every tank from only the ones you have seen. Thats guilt by association:spin3: I have seen several LED lit tanks around here that are every bit as colored up as a MH tank. Dont expect to see them post here though they gave up trying to prove their point long ago.
There are many simpleton arguments for sure. To me, the "photon is a photon" was one of the worst ever mentioned. Sanjay had these words in a article years ago and people assumed that the lights were equal in aggregate and never bothered to check out the other properties that matter like, most importantly, spectrum. It was silly for people to not do their own homework, but it happened. These type of over generalizations, especially with tricky words, can do more harm that good.
Lately, the phrase has been used as a suckers argument for those looking to "take a step back to the science" from supposed anecdotal deficiencies and also for people just to argue. I need to decide which one of those that I am. I do know that I will take the anecdotal most of the time when coming from those with experiences.
I hate to contribute to this suckers argument even more, but nobody is even sure if a photon from one light source is actually the same as from another. A photon is a quantum of possibly infinite things. In your example of the 450nm, the spectrum might be the same, but the intensity, fractioning ability, and many other characteristics of the quantum could be totally different. Anybody here an actual Quantum Field Theorist and not just stay in a Holiday Inn Express? Anybody have access to a Particle Collandar (or whatever they are called) in their basement? I doubt that anybody knows... and if they do, they should have been spending their time and multi-million dollar equipment on more important things than this. Should we at least amend this suckers argument to say "spectrum is spectrum" instead of a "photon is a photon?" Then, add in "spectrum with the same intensity is spectrum with the same intensity. That gets more of the way there. Perhaps then add in "spectrum with the same intensity and delivery is the same as spectrum with the same intensity and delivery." After you add in enough real variables to make a comparison worthwhile we can arrive and the conclusion that any quantum should really not be compared to another.
For some corals, this is entirely true. For instance, I can grow Kenya Trees under just about any form of light. They don't care what spectrum their light comes in, they just care that they get light (and even then, they don't care all that much...). But people who switch from LED to MH aren't trying to grow Kenya Trees. They are trying to grow SPS that have specific coloring and growth patterns based on a MH bulb.Unlike LEDs are bad and MH/T5s are good?
A photon in a given energy state is a photon in a given energy state. It does not know or care what it came from. Blue light at 450 nm is blue light at 450 nm. Light/photons do not take on additional properties depending on their source.
There is nothing inherently better or worse about photons created by MH, T5 or LED.
This is the point nynick has tried to make repeatedly and I've been having fun with.
Jim are you still running the 6 AI Sols at 70% with the original LEDS, or have you changed the guts out to something new?
When someone writes something like "I used LED for a year and the colour just wasn't there so I went back to MH" it is such a generic statement that it is difficult to know just what they are saying the problem is. Those arguements, taken in agregate, imply that there is something different about LED vs MH or T5....
The problem with the "photon is a photon" concept is that people aren't talking about photons when it comes to MH vs LED. They are talking about spectrum and light spread.
Yup. Over time manufacturers will narrow it down to a formula (combination of leds and intensities) that will deliver the same results as MH or T5.The amount of light coming from a LED or MH fixture may or may not be equal, depending on the fixture. Assuming we are talking about quality fixture though, it probably is. The spectrum and light spread is most definitely not the same though. It isn't even equal across different LED fixtures. It may be extremely similar with some LED fixtures. Maybe even so close as to be not noticeable (hence why we do have enough success stories for people to point and say "look! it worked for that person!'). But it can also be so far off that the corals change appearance completely over time. So much variation. In some ways, it isn't even fair to compare them because "LED" could be anything from a Kessil to a Marineland fixture, design-wise.
Well then, I'll just run down to Home Depot and pick up an off the shelf MH bulb for $34 bucks and I should be good.Whereas just about all MH are going to be the same, with minor variations for reflector or bulb.
Well then, I'll just run down to Home Depot and pick up an off the shelf MH bulb for $34 bucks and I should be good.![]()
:lmao:Well, a photon is a photon, right? :lmao:
Can you set up an led system that can grow corals with the same colouration as MH? Unless Powerboat Jim is fibbing, we are there now.
Lol a photon is a photon. Yes. While this was made in jest...
Let's remember that a "beam" of light is polyenergetic. Many photons of many different energies. Some beneficial for photosynthesis, some useless, some harmful. A photon is a photon, yes but not all photons are created equally. Some are stopped by heavy gas particles, others can penetrate layers of concrete and kill complex life by destroying DNA at it's very molecular bonds.
It was said in a very specific context. No one is suggesting that X rays will do just as well as T5's.
There are some people in this thread that do not seem to understand that, for example, 450nm MH light is identical to 450nm LED light.