Navyblue
Low maintenance first
I was planning to light a FOWLR and I was looking into LED strips. 5630 LED strip cost about $10 for a 5m (15') reel. 300 LEDs per reel, max at 150W but being set to run at 72W.
It may not seem like much, but they are only 1 cm wide. 4 strips of them over a 4' long tank would jam about 70W for 4cm wide (less than 2"). This is comparable, if not exceeds, the physical width and wattage density of T5HO with reflector, lets ignore the light output for a moment.
If we jam 40 strips it would only be 40cm wide (less than 18") with 700W. The LED is 120 deg spread, not great, but not worse than 360 deg spread of T5s. We could devise some sort of reflector at the sides to bring back some lost light back to the tank.
While it likely won't rival the penetration of narrow beam optics of high powered LEDs or MH, in theory I would imagine it to be comparable to T5HO which is good enough for 99% of reef application. And being 120 deg there will be no hot spots or shadow and spread will be extremely even.
The only question left is spectrum and heat. For the former I don't imagine them to be too different from, say eBay multichip cool white LEDs. But of course we have no way to know until someone measure it. For the later, I suppose it will be problematic (like T5HO). We could probably leave space and holes between the strips so that hot air can escape upwards from the water surface.
But the biggest red flag of all is, why is no one doing it?
I can see that there are somewhat plenty of those who use a few strips for FOWLR, but no one really make a serious panel with them. Any obvious reason on why it is such a bad idea?
It may not seem like much, but they are only 1 cm wide. 4 strips of them over a 4' long tank would jam about 70W for 4cm wide (less than 2"). This is comparable, if not exceeds, the physical width and wattage density of T5HO with reflector, lets ignore the light output for a moment.
If we jam 40 strips it would only be 40cm wide (less than 18") with 700W. The LED is 120 deg spread, not great, but not worse than 360 deg spread of T5s. We could devise some sort of reflector at the sides to bring back some lost light back to the tank.
While it likely won't rival the penetration of narrow beam optics of high powered LEDs or MH, in theory I would imagine it to be comparable to T5HO which is good enough for 99% of reef application. And being 120 deg there will be no hot spots or shadow and spread will be extremely even.
The only question left is spectrum and heat. For the former I don't imagine them to be too different from, say eBay multichip cool white LEDs. But of course we have no way to know until someone measure it. For the later, I suppose it will be problematic (like T5HO). We could probably leave space and holes between the strips so that hot air can escape upwards from the water surface.
But the biggest red flag of all is, why is no one doing it?

