<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=11109805#post11109805 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by kdblove_99
I dont know about that. The site is down so i cant see what the par is on the Phoenix with Electronic but i would guess not that great. i know its 88 on the HQI cause that is what i use to run.
I ran Phoenix bulbs DE for over a year. I did like it, But when i switched to SE i got a Radium 20K, No comparison. Radium bulb looks much nicer and the PAR is only 3 ppfd diffrent.
So, a 20K SE bulb has just as much PAR as the top 14K DE bulb
What don't you know about? I didnt say anything about the Phoenix having better par on an electronic ballast. It doesn't. But there are alot of people running that bulb on Electronics for the blue color. I think the PPFD is in the 70's on electronic BTW. It's from memory and I could be wrong but I dont believe it is that much lower. But that wasnt my point.
As far as your Par comparison, The 20K Radium has just as much par as the Phoenix 14K but I'm not sure I'm getting your point here either. The Phoenix 14K is not a 14K bulb. It's labeled a 14K bulb but it's above 20K. From Sanjays list, you can pick and choose 10 250 watt SE bulbs from manufacturers that have higher Par than the same manufacturers DE versions of the same Kelvin rated bulbs. And I can pick 8 of the DE versions that have higher PAR than the SE versions. All bulbs being run on their optimum ballasts. I did that to prove a point in a thread a while back. Somebody made the claim that SE easily beats DE in PAR and I was surprised to find how close it really was after checking all the 250 watt bulbs. Any other comparisons of PAR between different bulbs from different manufacturers or of different color temps. are not valid.
But if it was all about PAR why would you run 250 watt anyway. Run 400 watt or 1000 watt, why fool with 250 watt?
It seems like the point you are trying to make is that SE has more PAR. Even if it did in all 18 of those cases, which it doesnt, what difference does that make? It would make a difference if DE bulbs could not supply enough PAR but that's simply not the case.
There are inherent attributes to DE that I preferred when making my decision. Smaller reflector was one of them. The Glass shield was another. I do not want an exposed bulb or an exposed reflector over my aquarium. I wanted no risk of broken or cracked bulb. I prefer cleaning a small sheet of glass over cleaning a bulb and reflector to avoid the possibility of staining and maintaining the reflectivity.
I like that the DE bulbs start with higher internal pressures, and when driven by the spec magnetic HQI ballasts, reportedly lose par at a slower rate and have longer usable life compared to SE bulbs. I dont want to use a bulb other than the newer Iwasaki 250 watt 14000K DE. So, if I could do it all over I would stay exactly where I am. There is absolutely no reason or advantage to my switching to SE. None.