xxxduke62xxx
New member
Would put a bunch more but my phone only let's me post one pic at a time and it's annoying but you get the idea. Not bad for 5 months of growth with LEEds huh 
Hi
I've actually experimented with a lumen bright reflector with a 20k Giesemann 400 watt 20k lamp for par testing and the colour was very similar, so was the PAR against a single 52 using an Apogee electric sensor. Will the best will in the world I've been in the hobby 20 years and have used halides,t5,t8 etc and I have had just as good a coral colour and growth under my LEDs. The trick is not to over cook the corals with too much light and cause light inhibition. I use my PAR meter for best results and aim for around 500-650 PAR for light demanding acropora.
I'll see if I can find a picture tomorrow with a 20k halide over it.
that is because early adopters of the tech worked all that on for you and passed on the knowledge. Led is in the learning stage now, not much different than when other things were new. Things are getting worked out not sure how long it will take to mature it enough for the average user to have a good chance, but if no one ever uses it that will never happen.
LEDs last forever and use very little electricity. My two together at 100% are too strong. I had to figure out to turn the output down and not run them for 12 hours but that was it. After two months of experimenting and $450, my lighting needs are complete.
Not a dig, but Im sure the worst tank would luminescent as good as yours does under that lighting profile. Id like to see this tank under bright MH's.
Whilst not the best aquarium in the world LED's work for me (Hydra 52's) .
Despite the fact that i have no problem with LED's the other issue that needs discussing is that MH/T5 although still great light sources have a bit of a finite life span now so like it or lump it we have to move forward.
The Aquarium is 6 foot x 33.5" wide x 27" tall
My tank under 52's
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How are you taking your measurements for the LED? Do you use a conversion factor to interpret your readings? 500-650 par with LED seems rather optimistic. I had Ecoxotic Cannons over the tank with Kessil and some BuildMy Led strips and couldn't achieve that par except at the very top of the tank. I also had to run them all on maximum output which wouldn't appear blue as it does in your pic.
A lot of folks discussing LEDs in relation to larger systems where other options are tried and true and space is generally not a big concern. LEDs have a very bright (excuse the pun) future in the nano/pico reef world due to having much less heat output and the emitters can be configured into a relatively small form factor. I've been noticing a lot more attention to spectrum going into some of these small commercial LED arrays lately, too, since lack of spectrum has been an achilles heel with early LED systems. In this segment at least, I find that LEDs can be quite quite good, actually, and can accomodate a wide range of SPS when all other parameters are within acceptable ranges.
I do understand and appreciate the challenges LEDs currently present in keeping delicate SPS in very large and/or deep reef aquaria. However, I wouldn't go so far as to call them a 'failure', but rather a 'challenge', since some reef keepers are having good results with SPS.
LOL. Agree. :lol:
In all seriousness, at one point I thought there is no way LED's can colour up Acropora as nicely as MH or T5.
It may be closer to 20% which is a pretty good differential to have to account for. I have no doubt that LED grow corals and that those corals can thrive under them. There is definitely more thought and science that one needs to be put into the equation that MH/T5s don't require.Hi
I usually include a 5% offset in my readings due to the blue bias of the LED's. Its probably closer to 10% but i didn't want to over inflate my results.
As i had 4 x 52 on the aquarium i was seeing up to 700 PAR in certain areas at around 8-10" from the water surface , i did a rough double check with a Seneye PAR meter and this came out higher so i discounted it.
Ill see if i can find the results as it was a while back
Maybe its all the tinkering that is making LED tanks less successful. When I first put LEDs on my tank I followed the Rickett's reef youtube video to do my build back in 2011. I didn't have any fancy dimming or color control. Just 50:50 cool white and royal blue and 64 3w leds total over a 65 gallon tank. Intensity was at 100% via analog dimming knobs for both blue and white and it just stayed there. Everything I through under them did fine. That sounds a lot like metal halide stories. Maybe all this control-ability has put too much control in the hands of the users and has created issues through lack of knowledge. I just followed the old rule of thumb 5-10 watts per gallon for halide/sps and divided by 3 to figure out how much leds I needed and it worked. I didn't supplement other colors or do weird ramp ups and downs in intensity, the blues were on a wall timer for 10 hours and the whites were on for 8. It worked.
Other things I think are important to remember is starting a tank with one light source and letting coral grow in under it and then switching light sources can have all sorts of complications as the corals grew to the light patterns and then they changed. This is why growing from frags is always my preferred approach and I also prefer to keep lights on a given system consistent.
Another issue I think happens a lot is people add the coral before the fish. While I think this can be done successfully it does complicate things slightly. I prefer starting a tank with fish and rock and maybe some softies and lps. This helps to ensure a good mature cycle. When things progress and you notice a happy population of microfauna and a variety of coralline you know your tank is more than capable of supporting more finicky sps. As you start to add sps its important to supplement calc and alk in some way and monitoring these levels may be necessary.
You can keep your MH's and T5's and Chillers and change them expensive bulbs every 6 months and ill keep my LED's that will last for tens of years with much less energy bill and no need for a chiller.
I must know, how much has your energy bill + bulb bill soared?
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I'll be listening to Dr. Sanjay Joshi talk about converting his 500g from MH to LED this weekend at Reef Currents. I'm curious to hear his thoughts.
This isn't always the case but something I have noticed more often then not is high intensity and low nitrates. People are using carbon dosing, bio pellets , high capacity gfo, rox .08 carbon, ulns, or have a new tank. People are stripping their tanks and blasting them with light. Then they wonder why there tank isn't responding well to them. I think the more you feed your tank and can elevate your nitrates a bit with out going crazy , the better your corals will be under LEDs. I also believe that for some reason that mh are more forgiving to the coral when the tank is being stripped of nutrients. I now have my tank running at 10 for nitrates and have been as high as 20. My tank has never looked better.
I had built a program for my radions(4 gen 2's in a 72x24x24) and I do not mess with it(much).I give the tank a different kelvin for so much time and move to the next ramping up and down. Over the last couple years as my nitrates rose so I also raised my intensity. I got all the way up to 85% before I dropped back down to 80%. So I think tweaking LEDs need to be done, just slowly. Doing research before you start them helps too so you have an idea of what to expect. I.e. Coral being to light or dark.
Maybe I'm wrong but this is what I have observed in my tank. I used to run mh in the beginning and now run LEDs. I have also learned a lot between then and now.