Higher optics means lower par. You can accomplish the same effect by raising the lights.
Nanotuners sells them for $120, but if you buy 4 you get them for $100, I believe, don't quote me.
I ordered three of them. I will need a PAR meter to test them, so the search is on. Those plus my stunner strips should be good. I have also noticed that 6500K LEDs seem to be a bit bluer than 6500K halides and flourescents. I couldn't pass them up for $99, most sites has weaker PAR 38s and are asking $130-140.
I ordered three of them. I will need a PAR meter to test them, so the search is on. Those plus my stunner strips should be good. I have also noticed that 6500K LEDs seem to be a bit bluer than 6500K halides and flourescents. I couldn't pass them up for $99, most sites has weaker PAR 38s and are asking $130-140.
There's a bad phone pic in my album of my Cadlights 22g with two 20k, 40 degree bulbs, mounted 19" off the water. The sand and eggcrate are a bit washed out, but otherwise it's pretty accurate. They're not as bright as the 250w halide that they replaced.
Brightness and PAR are 2 different things. The LEDs tend to look dimmer, but trounce MH/T5 on PAR per watt. These 36 watters are using 60* optics, so they will have a bit of spread, unlike 40* optics. The extra LEDs should help with intensity.
(this is my account, the other one is my gf's account)
Yeah, I know. I'm not worried about the PAR. I really like the bulbs, and not having to deal with the heat is nice. The only thing I don't like as much as the halides is the shimmer. When the top of the water is rippled, the blue and white led's refract differently and it looks weird on the sand bed. The colors don't blend. It looks like you're on the dance floor at a rave or something, as has already been mentioned.
It is more than just the emitters. Evil, who I believe is an electrical engineer and a fanatical LED buff looked at several lamps before settling on the one that Nanotuners is selling. He felt they were the best product based on the circuitry, heat sinks, ect. The PAR readings suggest that they are plenty strong enough for most if not all corals, depending on placement. They are actually 5 leds putting out 21 watts, probably overdriven. Personally, I want the spectrum of about 14K so the daylights wouldn't cut it anyway.