macclellan
New member
Should produce less algae on glass too. That's always nice...
I have a few questions about the build:
It's interesting that you went 12 mixed on one driver and 4 blues on the other. Care to elaborate the thinking on that?
None out of the holes I drilled because the heatsink is in the way. I get some out of the existing side holes, but it is indirect reflection because the LEDs naturally have an effective 100 to 110 degree down angle (50 to 55 degrees off vertical). I've actually thought about painting the sides and front of my LED cover, but haven't been motivated to do so yet.Do you get any light bleeding out of the vent holes?
They are much dimmer, actually -- about 35 lumens per Watt compared to about 140 lumens per Watt. But the PAR they put out is in the major color-spectrum that the meter measures in.Any thoughts as to why the blues are so friggin bright, watt-wise, compared to the whites? That's the opposite of what common sense would say.
Does it cost more to use several weaker drivers like that? What you mention here seems very flexible for tweaking. I like that...I might do a different layout now -- like go with a different type driver only handles up to 6 LEDs each and use 18 LEDs with four drivers (one with 6 whites, one with 2 whites and 2 blues, one with 6 blues, and one with 2 blues for dawn/dusk light).
Right, I meant in terms of PAR, not lumens. I guess I forget how disassociated PAR and "looking bright to us" can be. I wonder if the straight blues are actually good at growing anything by themselves though? The PAR suggests so, but that still seems 'weird.'They are much dimmer, actually -- about 35 lumens per Watt compared to about 140 lumens per Watt. But the PAR they put out is in the major color-spectrum that the meter measures in.
Let me know if you have any questions. I'd be happy make suggestions. Even on a DIY project, it seems that an LED fixture ends up costing more than the rest of the tank/sump/filter/stand combined.i am considering doing something very similar to my own tank