Vertex Illumina Club

Vertex recommends one uv or multicolor module for every 24". Because there are no optic lenses with the Illumina, I don't think the disco ball effect will be an issue. However, I will be very careful with the intensity of the uv. I've slowly adjusted my uv led channel up 2 or or 3 percent every 3 or 4 days while keeping all other channels constant, and everything was fine until I exceeded 50% with the uv leds. I started to notice bleaching with some of my sps corals.

Depending on the size of your tank, you may be better off taking out the existing uv pad to install the multicolor module than to get an additional uv pad.

I dont get any disco ball effect, I have 3 additional U/V pads and 4 additional Multi-colour pads installed in my 4 foot unit. The U/V pads have been in for 6 months and the multi-colour pads in for 3 weeks.

I previously incresed the U/V pads by 3% every month, with no negative effect on the corals (sps), in fact the colours have developed very well and I am now at 65% on the U/V and tend to keep going at +3% each month with both the U/V and the multicolour. I think (IMHO) that 2 or 3 percent every 3 or 4 days is way too fast for sps to acclimatise....try a longer period between changes, I think you will be pleasantly surprised at the results.
 
I dont get any disco ball effect, I have 3 additional U/V pads and 4 additional Multi-colour pads installed in my 4 foot unit. The U/V pads have been in for 6 months and the multi-colour pads in for 3 weeks.

I previously incresed the U/V pads by 3% every month, with no negative effect on the corals (sps), in fact the colours have developed very well and I am now at 65% on the U/V and tend to keep going at +3% each month with both the U/V and the multicolour. I think (IMHO) that 2 or 3 percent every 3 or 4 days is way too fast for sps to acclimatise....try a longer period between changes, I think you will be pleasantly surprised at the results.

I completely agree with you about the 2 to 3 percent increase every 3 or 4 days being too fast, and the evidence is in the slightly bleached corals.:uhoh3: Fortunately, they have since recovered rather nicely since I've turned the uv level down to where it was peeking at 48% for 3 hours over the course of the lighting cycle with a ramping up and down in a bell-shaped curve of the graph.

Do you think there is a threshold, a level of light intensity and duration at which photoinhibition is induced with the corals in captivity no matter how slowly we acclimate them to the ever increasing light intensity of the Illumina with just a few clicks of a button on our computers? Even with the SR260, I don't foresee myself ever turning everything up to 100% no matter how long the acclimation period may be. What's your opinion on that?
 
help me here

help me here

k hellow my friends
i have vertex illumina 260
but the thing is i have since 4 to 5 month i guess
i love the light
but i am afraid i am making it to strong i have sps lps mushrooms i have every thing in the tank...
why i feel this is because every coral i get becomes lighter in color and am afraid the light is the problem...
i hope u can help me on this one....
and if any one has sps and feels like he is doing great with the color plz send me an atch file to the softwar i might do like him...
thank u so much....
and how far is the light from the tank i have it around 10com from the water....
 

Attachments

  • photo 1 (1).jpg
    photo 1 (1).jpg
    71.4 KB · Views: 5
Last edited:
Do you think there is a threshold, a level of light intensity and duration at which photoinhibition is induced with the corals in captivity no matter how slowly we acclimate them to the ever increasing light intensity of the Illumina with just a few clicks of a button on our computers? Even with the SR260, I don't foresee myself ever turning everything up to 100% no matter how long the acclimation period may be. What's your opinion on that?

I have read somewhere that above certain light levels, light actually "poisons" corals via the intensity overwhelming Zooanthellates. But in my opinion, having dived for many years on many coral reefs, I have seen first hand what sort of light intensities corals get in shallow water at peak light times during the day...far more than we could ever provide by artificial means. Many sps grow and thrive in 1 or 2 foot of water and the light they get at peak times is just monstrous !!! But the colours are spectacular.

In fact, Acro Al who is recognised Internationally as a serious sps expert, and also lives in the same City as me, keeps his corals under direct sunlight and his tank is truly spectacular...something I can only aspire to under artificial light, no matter how strong it is. His advice to me is always blast them with high light intensity....and so far he is right as far as the results in my tank go.

I personally believe it is a multi-dimensional issue.......if we get all the other parameters such as water chemistry, stability and flow under as tight control as possible, then sps will thrive under quite massive light. On the other hand, if the basic parameters are not right, then something gotta give !!!

Whatever the methodology chosen to up the light levels, I am sure that slowly, slowly is essential, and then the coral has plenty of time to adjust its own structure to compensate, without undue stress.

But that is just my opinion and I am sure that there are other views out there
 
i want to get the multicolor pads. im not sure how many i need i dont waste money on too many . my fixture is the sr-260 4 foot fixture, tank is 5 foot long and 24 deep and 24 high. i have a sps dominant tank. any suggestion?
 
i want to get the multicolor pads. im not sure how many i need i dont waste money on too many . my fixture is the sr-260 4 foot fixture, tank is 5 foot long and 24 deep and 24 high. i have a sps dominant tank. any suggestion?

I'm running 4 multi-colour pads and 3 U/V pads on my 4 foot unit.

The U/V pads have been in for a while now, but the Multis are new to my system so I cant be really definitive as to how they will go long term. So far I have definitely seen some better colouration in my Acros and the appearance is close to what I believe is the "natural" I am looking for.

I notice some additional algae activity which maybe due to extra red &green light from the multis...I am backing off on red and green to 10% and watching !!!
 
help dead vertex

help dead vertex

I came home I found out my led light vertex is not workingAnd I see their is water I really don't knw how*And at both ends the cords are black*And as they say the problem only comes at night*And live far away from everything (Lebanon)And I have to fix the problem with my own hands*How long can I keep my tank withought light*I am really ****ed right now....*
 
I came home I found out my led light vertex is not workingAnd I see their is water I really don't knw how*And at both ends the cords are black*And as they say the problem only comes at night*And live far away from everything (Lebanon)And I have to fix the problem with my own hands*How long can I keep my tank withought light*I am really ****ed right now....*
i'm not sure what you're keeping, but i wouldn't go more than 3 days without light. i would track down some sort of light in the next day or so.
 
Anyone have a problem after doing a firmware update? I updated the vlink and the light, it shows the firmware versions fine - but when I run my custom program, only the first module is working the script, the rest are on default. I've restarted the unit, computer, reinstalled the software, tried different saves of custom scripts - nada.

Anyone experience this before?
 
Seems doing 'erase all' then redoing the config again seemed to do the trick. Just for future reference. ;D
 
Back
Top