holdendaniel
New member
is anybody here using plasma light> any info on products i have seen the luxim but cannot find any pricing on it. any input from those who have used or seen the plasma units please help
is anybody here using plasma light> any info on products i have seen the luxim but cannot find any pricing on it. any input from those who have used or seen the plasma units please help
Wait a year. Current cost is ~$1000/fixture, which will come down, and the units are to be much improved (much like LED technology, it is changing quickly). At full power they run ~5700K, but are fully dimable, and can easily be dialed down to whatever Kelvin you want. Also, the output should be increased, as the bulbs are currently mounted vertically, and should be horizontal in the new fixtures, giving higher PAR values. The initial testing I've seen are promising (compared to MH lighting), but again, wait awhile.
5700k is pretty yellow in the spectrum, and if dimmed that would lower the k even further wouldnt it?
Also, its not like people dont use actinics with MH bulbs to get more blue in the light
Also, every coral is different and not all use the same bandwidth of light; if they did we would all be using the exact same bulbs.
So say the guys with marketing degrees. We heard this crap with CFLs, and I don't see anybody growing acropora with high CRI 'Sunlight CFLs' .Plasma lights are supposed to be more like natrual sunlight in that it produces a broader spectrum then MH's
Bolding added to emphasize point.This is ignoring fluorescence, which is a big part of coloration in corals. Corals with bright green, blue, red, pink, or purple colors are often that color because they re-emit light at that wavelength, not because they're reflecting it. They absorb light at one wavelength, excite an electron, and re-emit a photon at a lower wavelength, which depending on the placement of the pigment could either hit your eye or the zoox. They also tend to use mixtures of FPs of different colors, so a purple coral could be the result of a purple FP or a blue FP and a red FP.
You can't just look at a coral and tell which part of the spectrum it's actually using based on its color. If you could, it would make scientists' jobs a lot easier.
im running a plasma would be interested to talk to others that are as well.
having some issues I want to nut out with others...