der_wille_zur_macht
Team RC
All too often, the lighting in our reef tanks is extremely uniform. As reef keepers, we typically strive for uniformity of light distribution. We evenly space our bulbs above the tank and try to get even coverage across the entire volume of water. Obviously, this can have positive implications if you're running a coral farm, but IMHO it does not represent the natural reef very well. It may be the best way to get good growth across the entire tank, but perhaps that's not always the goal one is striving for.
In planning my next tank, I am trying to take this into consideration - I would much rather have "interesting" light and sacrifice a little bit of growth potential. By intetesting, I mean live rock that casts shadows, dimly lit caves, or even entire areas of the tank that have less light. This month's TOTM has an interesting light distribution:
http://reefcentral.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=1525231
It seems as if larger tanks are easlier to light more interestingly. The appearance of point-source light creating a "shaft" of sparkle lines down into the water column, for instance.
Anyone out there have pictures of other tanks with interesting, non-standard approaches to lighting? Anyone done a tank like this themselves?
In planning my next tank, I am trying to take this into consideration - I would much rather have "interesting" light and sacrifice a little bit of growth potential. By intetesting, I mean live rock that casts shadows, dimly lit caves, or even entire areas of the tank that have less light. This month's TOTM has an interesting light distribution:
http://reefcentral.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=1525231
It seems as if larger tanks are easlier to light more interestingly. The appearance of point-source light creating a "shaft" of sparkle lines down into the water column, for instance.
Anyone out there have pictures of other tanks with interesting, non-standard approaches to lighting? Anyone done a tank like this themselves?