Fish experience temporary blindness when lights go out?

spicytofu

New member
I made a DIY LED fixture with an Arduino controlling Mean Well LDD controllers.

It is made of 24 Cree XM-L2 8000K Whites and 24 XR-E Royal Blue (new revised versions that handle 1500 mA)

It is definitely overkill if I run 1.5 A though them (duty cycle of 100%)

Right now, with no access to a PAR meter, I am using my eyes (not smart I know) to adjust the lighting. I set the whites to about 20% and blues to about 50% and its looks "well lit"

When I turn off the lights (I programmed it to slowly fade in/out), the fishes seem are swimming blind for a few minutes. I see them running to the the glass or swimming along the edges as a "guide rail"

After a few minutes, they start to swim fine and go about the tank.

Is this normal? Anyone experience this?

I have clowns and tangs for now.
 
Most sensory input depends on contrast in the environment in some degree, and if the curve is too sudden or steep, likely there's a period of 'from overload to nothing' just as you do when the lights go out and your senses see only black.
 
Most sensory input depends on contrast in the environment in some degree, and if the curve is too sudden or steep, likely there's a period of 'from overload to nothing' just as you do when the lights go out and your senses see only black.

Thanks, common sense would point to that, I just had to be sure. And since they have no iris, its worse for them

Im guessing could put extra stress on the fish? I have to be careful of the PBT I have in there.
 
You might go to the light and equipment forum and ask about adjustments. My kit ramps down to low, low blues before it goes out, and when I had MH, I had an actinic kit that would continue to provide blues for an hour after the main lights were out.
 
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