hahnmeister
In Memoriam
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=10954327#post10954327 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by daven
But in this case there is a difference. MH is more of a point source and the heat they generate is concentrated in a single place and so it is more likely to transfer the heat to the water. The T5 spread the same amount over a larger area and therefore may be less likely to transfer the heat.
Now if Bean put both in the tank they would both heat the tank equally. Or they would electrocute him.
Just thought I would chime in on this... for the most part Bean is right. But there is a mistake in the above assumption. For conduction and convection, the greater the area means the more heat is transferred. I covered this in another thread a while back where people were debating heat from T5s vs halides (again and again). The fact that halides take up less of the surface area of a tank actually means they have less area to transfer conductive and convective heat across, so the T5s are actually worse in this regard... something I can attest to first hand. The 'thermal pocket' that T5s can create over a tank is much worse than a halide. Now, since if you are at all concerned about the heat in your tank, you are also likely to use fans, this shouldnt be an issue, BUT, radiant heat transfer is another story. The thing is, in most cases, the smaller area that a halide uses above the tank leaves much more open for convective cooling.
With the LED's, yes, LED's arent as efficient as people think. They are just good at focusing that output into a narrow beam for maximum intensity, like a laser. Even the most efficient light sources like a HQI 3000K halide still have about 75% of their electricity converted to heat energy (still waiting on those diode lasers! lol). So those 20w LED's are about the same as an 18watt heater in the tank. The other 2 watts is going to light energy. Now, in a closed system, that would mean its going into the tank... but our tanks are not closed systems (or else we wouldnt be able to see anything inside the tank because no light would escape)... so some of that light stays in the tank, yes, heating it, and some of it escapes... but for all we care, 18w vs. 20 watts is nothing to debate about in the grand scheme of all the energy transfer that is going on in our systems. A 20w heater would put almost all of that 20w into the system as heat. A 20w speaker would not though... unless you were somehow able to capture all the sound and kinetic (from the moving diaphragm) energy it makes inside the system. A 20w motor, if the water it moves is kept within the system, then yes, all of its 20w is really going to heat. Sure, only 10w of it might be actual heat from the pump, but all the work done to the water adds energy to the water (kinetic), and heats the water. This is why some people winter over their ponds by using airstones in the water... the movement of the water heats it and can prevent the pond surface from icing over, even on the coldest of days.'
As I read on though, it seems that others have already covered this information.