deepseadan
New member
Question for you light guys, and this is kind of a difficult question to explain. I just recently switched from 250 watt 14k halides, to aqua illumination sol super blue fixtures. The halides were 14k, and obviously more towards the blue spectrum, and again obviously not full spectrum. The light source was a single 14k source. My aquaillumination sol's have three individual light sources, a 6500k led, a 450nm led, and a 470nm led. Running all three LEDs at 100% gives it somewhere between maybe 12k and 14k to the eye, but are the corals still receiving the full spectrum of light from each individual led (6500k etc).
I guess what I'm trying to ask is, is it a positive, negative, or maybe no difference at all to my sps whether I run just the 6500k alone or one of the blues or both royal and blue? Are the blues just increasing par and penetration, or could they actually drown out the full spectrum and par of the 6500k's?
I'm not worried about the look to the eye, just what's best for coral growth and color. I can always manually adjust the kelvin to enjoy the color.
One other note, I guess this could be true for fluorescent bulbs as well, like using 10,000k, 460nm, and purple bulbs.
Sent from my ADR6400L using Tapatalk
I guess what I'm trying to ask is, is it a positive, negative, or maybe no difference at all to my sps whether I run just the 6500k alone or one of the blues or both royal and blue? Are the blues just increasing par and penetration, or could they actually drown out the full spectrum and par of the 6500k's?
I'm not worried about the look to the eye, just what's best for coral growth and color. I can always manually adjust the kelvin to enjoy the color.
One other note, I guess this could be true for fluorescent bulbs as well, like using 10,000k, 460nm, and purple bulbs.
Sent from my ADR6400L using Tapatalk