coolfishy101
Member
Hello all,
I was wondering if we are looking at the Green/Yellow/Red spectrum of LED's the wrong way. Some seem to claim them as a new "gimmick" and are only good for growing nuissance algae. So far from many tanks people love LED's at the start but over time see a decline in health/color, claiming the narrow spectrum causing the problem. The raidion by ecotech includes a variety of colors for a full spectrum. And i was thinking that maybe that nuissance algae is beneficial in small amounts. In other words, we need the blue for the coral, and the green/yellow/red to grow enough algae (algae free floating in the water column that we can't see) to feed the corals and/or pods. With only a narrow spectrum that for example the AI units provide, it's like having a bubble king skimmer on a 20gallon. Water that is too clean leading to pale corals.
I also understand there are tanks proving successful with "narrow spectrum" LED's, we all know there are exceptions in this hobby.
Am I way off on this? I don't know how much RGB the whites supply in today's units. It just seems to me we may be a bit narrow minded when we look at spectrum vs. what the coral needs. All in all I believe we are in the right direction.
I was wondering if we are looking at the Green/Yellow/Red spectrum of LED's the wrong way. Some seem to claim them as a new "gimmick" and are only good for growing nuissance algae. So far from many tanks people love LED's at the start but over time see a decline in health/color, claiming the narrow spectrum causing the problem. The raidion by ecotech includes a variety of colors for a full spectrum. And i was thinking that maybe that nuissance algae is beneficial in small amounts. In other words, we need the blue for the coral, and the green/yellow/red to grow enough algae (algae free floating in the water column that we can't see) to feed the corals and/or pods. With only a narrow spectrum that for example the AI units provide, it's like having a bubble king skimmer on a 20gallon. Water that is too clean leading to pale corals.
I also understand there are tanks proving successful with "narrow spectrum" LED's, we all know there are exceptions in this hobby.
Am I way off on this? I don't know how much RGB the whites supply in today's units. It just seems to me we may be a bit narrow minded when we look at spectrum vs. what the coral needs. All in all I believe we are in the right direction.