Kessil A360WE

I only read first and last so i dont know if anybody else has said this yet, but i think the majority of led users want full spectrum leds. I personally had a diy blue/white and like my new full spectrum alot better. I like they way kessils look personally but theres some debate on how effective a blue/white led fixture can be. I think this is why there not all the range from what i see people want full spectrum


I think people like these lights mostly because it gives the closest thing to MH without being metal halide. Full disclosure, I have never owned MH or a Kessil. But I am definitely considering these lights for my 180 build based on what I've read about them.
 
Kessil A360WE

I think people like these lights mostly because it gives the closest thing to MH without being metal halide. Full disclosure, I have never owned MH or a Kessil. But I am definitely considering these lights for my 180 build based on what I've read about them.


I'll give a little insight on why I like them, and not all of my reasoning is Kessil specific:

-Kessil, as well as a lot of other LED solutions, have a tiny footprint. Take a look at a few pages back when I posted the single A360W covering a 36x24 rimless tank. It's amazing that such small fixtures can have this much viewable coverage. I'll take a Radion or a Kessil (or equivalent LED) over any other MH setup on the market today, hands down.

-LED lighting in general mimics MH lighting. The shimmer I think is fantastic. That's exactly what you see when snorkeling on the reefs...it's great that we can closely recreate this aspect in our living rooms.

-LED lighting in general generates less heat and consumes much less power than other lighting solutions.

-Kessil has been manufacturing professional and industrial lighting solutions for decades. The company was started by three UC Berkeley grads, and this is super cool because that's where my lady attended college for her undergrad. So I'm already a bit Kessil biased. ;-)

-LED lighting is very modern, just like the rimless aquariums that have become most popular over the course of the past 4 or so years. It's new wave, and to a lot of tech guys, it's very cool. Everything else seems archaic. Admittedly, LED is not perfect though..but it will get there most assuredly.

-Kessil is headquartered right here in the Bay Area..obviously local to me. I personally happen to LOVE that! I've read blogs about their manufacturing process, and seen tours of their manufacturing facility.

Buying a domestically designed and engineered product appeals to more and more people nowadays for obvious economical reasons. A side note, my last light was a Giesemann, which was probably the slickest most well made fixture I've ever owned. But, it was a pain having to deal with customer service that wasn't based in the United States. I mean, you guys all know how that is, right? Having replacement parts and other customer service related functions located right here in the USA speaks volumes when it comes to the support the end user will receive if issues arise.

I mean, I dare you to go and try buying a Giesemann Reflexx HQI + T5. Try it. Your head will explode by the time you finally get a hold of someone who has one in stock. Forget about trying to get customer service out of them.


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In short, I like rimless aquariums. In order to contribute to the sleek and sharp, clean lines of rimless aquariums, an equally sleek lighting solution is required. I don't appreciate the amount of heat and the power consumed by typical MH+T5 fixtures, and I like viewing my tank from above. So the smaller the fixture, the better. Enter Kessil.

All of this is what attracts me to LED lighting, and even more so to the Kessil.
 
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Kessil also manufactures the LEDs in the lights to their own specifications. Everyone else uses off the shelf LED technology.
 
One of our LFS has them setup for a few month now...I was glad as I was looking at them online a few months ago but lucky that I could see it in person.

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Kessil A360WE

Kessil also manufactures the LEDs in the lights to their own specifications. Everyone else uses off the shelf LED technology.


Exactly. You and me can group buy some random Cree LED's, solder them together in steel box and call them some clever name like "Halo Mega Aquascapers" and people will buy them up like hot cakes.

More to the point though, Kessil can control the quality on their products 100%. That means a lot.
 
Exactly. You and me can group buy some random Cree LED's, solder them together in steel box and call them some clever name like "Halo Mega Aquascapers" and people will buy them up like hot cakes.

More to the point though, Kessil can control the quality on their products 100%. That means a lot.


That's right, Kessil QC from design to shipping.
 
Just installed the A360WE, and am starting the acclimation process at 40% intensity. Should I also keep the color dialed back during this time?
 
Just installed the A360WE, and am starting the acclimation process at 40% intensity. Should I also keep the color dialed back during this time?
Its the whites that do all the damage .. I run kessill 350 on my tank and made the mistake of running 100% thinking they look to dim.. After talking to kessil was told blues 80%-100% to start and whites 20% and slowly ramp up currently my blues are 100% whites 50% and 16 inches above water surface.. I have a mixed reef of lps and sps
 
Just installed the A360WE, and am starting the acclimation process at 40% intensity. Should I also keep the color dialed back during this time?

You don't dial back color, though you can pick the spectrum.

The A360WE has two controls. Light intensity and Spectral tuning.

Light intensity is self explanatory.

Spectral tuning when turned all the way to the left is most like a Kessil Sky Blue, which is the whitest light they produce. Similar to a 10K bulb. Set to the middle the light is most like the Kessil Ocean blue Similar to a 14K-20K bulb. Set all the way to the right it's most like an actinic bulb.
 
Its the whites that do all the damage ..

It's too much light that can do the damage. Light of any color. If you look at the spectral graphs for the Kessil A350 series lights you'll see that the most PAR is achieved by Ch2, which appears white.

You could damage corals with any color light if you give them too much.
 
I've read many threads where LED owners have switched back to MH or T5s. Every LED fixture there has been someone that just wasn't happy either coral color/growths, brightness, and overall appearance. From Radions to AI to Pacific Sun to Reef Breeders have all had someone switch back, everyone except Kessil. I have yet to find anyone that said after they bought and installed the A360WE and said they wanted their old fixture back. I thought this was worth mentioning for potential buyers.
 
Kessil A360WE

By "dial back", I just meant keeping the light more blue than white. I would think that would be safer during acclimation, but maybe it's unnecessary(?)


Yeah Fred, that's pretty much what reefvet means I think. Color is color.

You'll be wanting to "dial back" the intensity..light intensity is what's getting you in this particular case.
 
I bought the A360 when it first came out. I was back and forth on which LED to get but decided with Kessil after seeing that they specialize with indoor growing. My rational was that if they can grow plants then they should be able to grow corals. And then love how my APEX automates it. Everything in my tank has responded greatly to the upgrade from the crappy Cadlight LEDs.
 
Never left

Never left

I've read many threads where LED owners have switched back to MH or T5s. Every LED fixture there has been someone that just wasn't happy either coral color/growths, brightness, and overall appearance. From Radions to AI to Pacific Sun to Reef Breeders have all had someone switch back, everyone except Kessil. I have yet to find anyone that said after they bought and installed the A360WE and said they wanted their old fixture back. I thought this was worth mentioning for potential buyers.

There has been a couple but definitively not in droves, there quality is good there C/S is great, not to many bad stories, people feel good about their purchase. So i would say their a safe bet, definitely if you can see them in person you will be impressed.
 
Food for thought is previously one go to a lfs to get corals. As it is a common standard of mh supplemented by t5, I guess when the corals are brought home, it is easier to aclaimatize and coral loss might be minimal.
Now that there are various led light fixtures with fanciful individual channel tuning, I suppose buying corals from lfs/people wif led light sets that is different from yours might be more challenging?

What I like abt kessil is if it seem to mimick the mh. So corals have a higher/easier chance to survive?
 
What I like abt kessil is if it seem to mimick the mh. So corals have a higher/easier chance to survive?


Not quite.

The Kessil, like many other LED fixtures, mimic MH lighting in terms of casting a shimmer, glitter lines into a tank. This is because of single sources of light. Nothing else. This is an appealing aspect to a lot of aquarists.

Some people want their corals to grow at astronomically high rates and have colors named after ecstasy pills that don't actually appear out in a naturally created ocean reef. I can't speak to their desires, as I share none of them.

I just want my tank to look like a small piece of ocean, with the sun shining over it. And I want nothing in it to die.
 
Jam setting up a 90g mixed reef. Dimensions are 48x18x25. While I realize the 360w would be what I would need to buy, I am considering mounting them a bit higher than normal.

By raising them higher...how will that affect my coverage and more importantly the growth of LPS/SPS corals. Any thoughts?

Dom
 
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