TropTrea
New member
So I just wanted to post some recent observations I have made with my own tank. What I am about to say isn't anything special or unknown. It isn't groundbreaking by any means either. Just different then what we/I repeat day in and day out.
I'm currently running my Sunpower over a 24g tank and it is total overkill. Like I'm bleaching sps on the bottom and have cut my photo period way down. I added an actinic a few weeks ago to help lower PAR but it hasn't helped a ton even. It is helping but not quite enough.
So I decided to only run all 6 bulbs for two hours and then run a two bulb dusk/ dawn for eight hours total. I went with my standard blue and purple plus combo but didn't love it. So I tried two blue plus (haven't run this in years) and hated it. Like I truly hated it. I lost colors in almost everything. I had some good fluorescence but not great. This is when it all hit me!
I put the actinic on with a blue and found it to be awesome. But I noticed the lack of color in everything under the blue. Switch bulbs around and put the actinic in back and same story. The back corals came to life while the front looked bad. Do I have a bad blue bulb maybe? It looks very green to me overall. Like in all honesty the peak is around 480nm not 454nm. I have three other blues to try so I try them all, same results. When did the blue plus become so green??? My old blue plus bulbs were always much deeper blue overall.
So here are my thoughts overall. I may get flamed as some of them are a total 180 from my old thinking.
1) blue light is amazing but we are over emphasizing it. I want more violet-blue light in my tanks.
2) the aquablue bulb isn't nearly as bad as I once thought. I actually enjoy it in my daylight hours to see some true color in my sps.
3) those of us with good T5 fixtures can sacrifice some PAR and run actinics. On my 6 bulb fixture I plan to run at least 2 pure actinic bulbs and then 4 high PAR bulbs. I hope to upgrade to an 8 bulb fixture actually for my new 60g cube. I will run 3 at that point.
Fluorescence is great and all but I find myself enjoying the true colors in my corals and then letting them fluoresce later in the day with a couple actinics. I have an sps colony in my tank that has gorgeous purple tips in the sun but when my lighting comes on, I see baby blue tips and a purplish body. During the day I like to see that purple stand out.
Again, nothing here is new or unprecedented. Just my new opinion. I like pastel colors as well, as my new tank will be all zeovit. I feel I will have better coloring by using more violet light. I'm also on the quest to find a better blue bulb. I want a deeper blue but not violet bulb. I doubt it is available but I will look.
Ryan
I do see your point however with my experimenting I aproached it differently. The Blue plus bulbs suposedly have a peak at 420nm and another peak between 454 and 460 nm. But it is also a wide spectrumed bulb that produces light as low as 400nm and as high as 520 nm. Given the normal sensativity of the human eye we see green light much more readily than we see blue or near violet light. So it is understandable that the Blue Plus will look more green to us an 420nm atinic bulb.
For me when I switched to 6 blue plus bulbs, with one purple and one ge 6500 my first impression was it was way to blue. After getting used to the color I lost that feeling. Personlay I believe it was my eye getting adjusted to seeing the bluer color.
About a year ago I added a strip of 6 LED's 456nm royal blues as moon lights. These were 3 watt LED's that I was running at roughly about 1/2 watt each. When I ran them alone at night it was wow only the florescene was visable. But now remember LED's cover specific wavelenghts and there is basicly 0 light below 439nm or above 469nm. So I upped the wattage to 3 watts per LED and use them as pre-dawn and post dusk now. They still produce fantastic florescense even more so than before.
In my playing with this I tried some so called 420 nm LED's and they produced less florescence than the 454's did and also gave the tank a pink look. They did however bring out a little yellow florescense that I had not seen before on some LPS corals. My next try was the atinics as they are suposed to be strong at 420 nm and still give a range of some blues. They did give some florescense but not nearly what the 454 nm LED's did.
As comparison the 18 watts of 454 nm LED's gave much more florescense than 108 watts of 420nm T-5 Atinics. But the Atinic T-5's did give more florescense than the Blue plus bulbs did.
I have also experimented on another tank with LED's. I have found that 454 Royal Blue LED's bring out some florescent patterns and that 460 nm LED's bring out other floresecent paterns. Yes some patterns are the same with either but others corals look different mainly chifting from a yellow green color to a blue green color of florescense. With both on they produce a green closer to but more intense than what I see with T-5 Blue Plus bulbs.
I'm starting to think that the ideal lighting fixture is a combination of T-5's and LED's. The LED's targeting the 454 to 460 nm range and the T-5's filling in the gaps between 420nm and 500 nm. The full spectrum mid day range can be covered with either the T-5's or the LED's.