Thizzelle686
New member
Lets get some update pics of the 15k. I want to keep one ocean blue over my 25 gallon 21x18x16 but i have only seen one tank that is similar. PLEASE HELP
I did see a video where it was stated that the dense matrix LED from a DiCon product called a fiber lamp had been adapted for the Kessil lamps.Eventually I found some specifications for the fiber lamp and it doesn't look good at all.
http://www.fiberlamp.com/products/fiber_lamp_fl2100.php
Note the 6500k cool white version is rated at 1100 lumens, with a power consumption of 36w that equates to 30 lumens per watt.
A 470 nm blue lamp is rated at 357 lumens or a little under 10 lumens per watt.
I'm assuming that the various colour temperature aquarium versions are just a mix of white and blue die's within the dense matrix package so the efficiency should be comparable to the fiber lamp.
The Fiberlamp and the A150 share the same dense matrix multi-chip LED. Right away I thought the A150 must crank too. However the FiberLamp sports one serious controller. Not only can it cycle through every color under the sun and dim - it is programmable via a computer. The FiberLamp also has active cooling. These features do not come cheap as the FiberLamp retails for $850.
If you consider a Cree XP-G or XM-L 6500k LED can deliver between 100-150 lumens per watt( actually a little more) and a 470nm Cree XP-E blue can be gotten with around 40 lumens per watt then these Kessil lights sound very inefficient!
No wonder there are no technical specifications available!
I've put these points to the UK rep for these lights a couple of times on a UK forum but he for some reason has so far chosen to abandon the threads where these points were raised..
"We do not have official PAR readings. There are some posted on different forums, but there seems to be some inconsistency.
A few things to note about PAR:
1) PAR is usually a flat value of light between 400-700nm.
From what we understand, most of the light coral uses efficiently is from 400-500nm. PAR readings should be higher from a broad source of light like halides, T5s or all white LEDs that have a good portion of light in the 500+ nm range vs. LEDs that have a mix of wavelengths. That is why most LEDs can be so much more power efficient. Because we can target individual wavelengths that are most beneficial and eliminate ones that are not. PAR typically does not measure what blend of spectrum is the most usable, only photons in a given spectrum range.
2) Our A150W contains about 5-9% of its light below the 400nm range (UVA) and that will not be detectable unless the PAR meter is specifically designed to read UV."


The Red Light Theory Revisited
In order for a hypothesis to advance to a theory, there must be some sort of evidence from experiments in support of the idea. The following presents the evidence in support of the 'red light theory.'
Hawaiian researchers, in the 1980's, found that exposure to broad bandwidth red light resulted in low growth rates in corals (Kinzie et al., 1984). Further experiments (Kinzie and Hunter, 1987) found that corals exposed for more than 60 days to light composed of mostly the red portion of the spectrum resulted in corals that ""¦were almost entirely free of algae and appeared white, but retained complete coverage of living animal tissue. We have not been able to obtain this degree of bleaching with any other method, including prolonged shading."
Results from further experiments would suggest that red light generated by light-emitting diodes (LEDs) can induce coral bleaching. Experiments conducted in early 2002 (see http://advancedaquarist.com/issues/june2004/feature.htm) demonstrated that narrow bandwidth red light produced by an LED in underwater housings caused bleaching in the stony coral Pocillopora meandrina. I conducted later experiments in 2004 that resulted in bleaching of an expanded selection of corals (including stony corals Porites, Pavona, Pocillopora and unidentified zoanthids - see Figures 6 and 7).
Hi,
Can someone show me the power supply for this unit? I understand the light has a cord that connects to a power supply ... but I can't find anything at all on these. They mention that the PSU can handle 240v/50hz in addition to US standard power, but again I can't find any photos or information on the outlet side of these. Does the cable that connects the PSU to the wall socket have its own socket on the PSU or is it moulded into the PSU itself? What kind of cable is it (kettle plug style, laptop style, etc) exactly?
I'm surprised to see so many happy sounding customers here.
I searched high and low for technical specifications, anything stating exactly how much light is produced by these lights"¦nothing !
Lots of videos with sales pitch but no hard facts, I like facts.
I did see a video where it was stated that the dense matrix LED from a DiCon product called a fiber lamp had been adapted for the Kessil lamps.Eventually I found some specifications for the fiber lamp and it doesn't look good at all.
http://www.fiberlamp.com/products/fiber_lamp_fl2100.php
Note the 6500k cool white version is rated at 1100 lumens, with a power consumption of 36w that equates to 30 lumens per watt.
A 470 nm blue lamp is rated at 357 lumens or a little under 10 lumens per watt.
I'm assuming that the various colour temperature aquarium versions are just a mix of white and blue die's within the dense matrix package so the efficiency should be comparable to the fiber lamp.
If you consider a Cree XP-G or XM-L 6500k LED can deliver between 100-150 lumens per watt( actually a little more) and a 470nm Cree XP-E blue can be gotten with around 40 lumens per watt then these Kessil lights sound very inefficient!
No wonder there are no technical specifications available!
I've put these points to the UK rep for these lights a couple of times on a UK forum but he for some reason has so far chosen to abandon the threads where these points were raised..
Colt what makes you think that although the Fiberlight and Kessil lights share the same dense matrix LED design that the Kessil would some how be more efficient?
I really don't understand why you say that Cree LED's efficiency and PUR capabilities are at odds but somehow the Kessil LED's match the requirements of chlorophyll better?
I'm guessing here but I think if you could find a spectrograph for a DiCon 6500k LED that it wouldn't look much different to a Cree 6500k .
I think the mistake you are making is comparing a spectrograph of a Kessil light containing multiple blue LED dies to each white LED to a spectrograph provided by Cree of just a single white LED.
Of coarse as a percentage of output the single white LED will seem to have far more red, green , orange, yellow in relation to blue than a white LED that is supplemented with six blue LED's.
Let me point you in the direction of the spectrographs provided by AI for their Sol white and sol blue light fixtures
http://aquaillumination.com/sol/performance.html
Both of the fixtures are using the same Cree XP-G white LED's but the Sol blue having a higher ratio of blue to white LED's produces less green, yellow etc.
Also notice how when using both blue and royal blue LED's the blue spike isn't exactly narrow. And seems to cover the absorbance peaks of chlorophyll very well.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Chlorophyll_ab_spectra2.PNG
The blue peak provided by the Kessil seems to be mostly 470nm with a tiny little bit of something closer to 400nm thrown in, the vast proportion of the blue light being a narrow 470nm peak, very similar to the quoted 470nm that the blue Fiberlamp produces!
Boudreaux, no what I'm saying wouldn't mean that all of your corals should be dead , just that you would have gotten more light per watt if you had bought lights containing Cree LED's.
Kessil haven't really been making lights for the horticultural industry, IMO they have just been suckering a lot of weed growers that smoke to much of their own stuff.
Colt the efficiency figures I posted for the Fiberlight were for the all 470nm blue and all 6500k white versions not for those containing multiple coloured dies.
It was easier to work out the efficiency that way "¦but I don't see how it would have been a problem if I were getting my figures from a RGB version"¦the aquarium versions have dies of at least two colours.
Skimate
I have no technical data to prove or disprove your theory. However because the platform was developed from another lamp doesn't mean they share the same specs. The LEDS cree produces are based on earlier generation LEDS. Those early LEDS weren't nearly as efficient as they are now yet they are "packaged" the same. Perhaps Kessil has greatly increased the light output from their dense-matrix led thru R&D just as cree has with its diodes
Boudreaux, I'm sorry that I am going to go into a thread and talk about a different light for which I have no specifications and absolutely no experience while insisting it is identically efficient to another completely different light of which I also have no experience