You won't regret the switch...
You won't regret the switch...
Congrats on your LEDs. I built my own arrays for my 72g bowfront and I really love it, absolutely no regrets! I built 2 LED arrays consisting of 42 LEDs at a 3:1 (royal blue: cool white drove at 750mA respectively); with 6 cool white high noon LEDs drove at 1000mA each for 4 hrs/ day; 6 LEDs per array stringed together for high noon lighting.
My day light begins at 6am with a ramp of 0-70% over 2hrs; the whites are staggered by 1/2hr. My high noon blast lasts from 12-4pm at 1000mA. Evening ramp down begins at 5:30pm over 2hrs with blues powering off around 8:25pm each night.
My focus on my coral animals is on their nutrition, corals are heterotrophic like us although some disagree. Majority of folks focus on lighting too much when this plays only a small role to do with regard to developing needs for the corals energy demands. Focus should also be on their nutrition as a small percentage of a coral animal's needs for energy actually come from lighting via their hosted zooxanthellae photosynthesis process. I'm not suggesting this is unimportant. Instead, I'm merely pointing out that your corals will experience some changes that will take place over time as you have changed their light spectrum that provides the energy for your coral animals zooxanthellae. The zooanthellae your coral animals host currently may not stay with it's host, you may see this change unfold as stringy matter emanating from your corals organelles. This is a normal process that takes place and can lead to eventual demise of your animal experiencing this over the long haul, someone may correct me here but I believe Eric calls this photoadaption? So, during this time your coral can swap zooxanthella that do thrive under a given spectrum better but will take time. You can maximize your corals chances by providing their nutrition needs; i.e., phytoplankton.
You should know in about 8 weeks or so if your coral animal is going to do well in a given light spectrum, if it's not, then several factors might be contributing.

I only offer this information as FYI and encourage you to read Eric Borneman's; Corals...it's a great book! The complexity here is over my head and some of it makes sense and sticks, lol, but you should be able to do well with LEDs accompanied with other good husbandry habits.
Take care and enjoy your tank! It's a whole new experience when you your tank becomes absofreakinglutely awesome! (Mark Callahan tossed that one back at me when I shared with him how absofreakinglutely awesome my tank is doing since the switch)
My corals are thriving very well and have been doing well after their break in to their environment. You don't have to go adding a bunch of packaged goods to make them thrive, just a few needs to keep them healthy and thriving.
Take care and again congrats! LEDs are really fun to experience!
Respectfully,
Brian.