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-   -   LED lighting requirement for SPS (http://www.canreef.com/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=95630)

lastlight 03-11-2013 08:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mrhasan (Post 801187)
Just to add something (since I drooled over and studied full spectrum LEDs vs BW LEDs few months ago):

there's no legitimate proof that full spectrum helps coral growth. For now, people only still to it for aesthetics. Or maybe some study did came up showing full spectrum helps coral growth :idea:

TRANSLATION: There's no proof (but there might be) :biggrin:

mrhasan 03-11-2013 09:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by lastlight (Post 801189)
TRANSLATION: There's no proof (but there might be) :biggrin:

Haha. Just tried to elaborate it ;)

It is very much "possible" that full spectrum "might" help; maybe marine biologists haven't published it yet or maybe hobbyist are not aware of it.

Bottom line is: Blue/white LEDs are capable of growing anything given that you got the right fixture instead of relying on marketing terms like "double" and "quad". Those terms are helpful when it comes to T5s but not for LEDs ;)

sphelps 03-11-2013 09:02 PM

Well first of all, white LEDs are full spectrum. The advantage of what is referred to as "Full Spectrum" LED fixtures is the additional color control, just like a running a bunch of T5 bulbs you can tune color quite effectively with different bulb combos or you just run blue and white bulbs. Blue and white LED fixtures are more limited and I personally find running cool white LEDs in particular wash out some colors while fixtures with neutral white LED and/or red and green leds allow for cutting back on the cool white output enhancing certain colors. Debatable topic as it is, "full spectrum" does seem to be the popular trend for new fixtures and what most hobbyists prefer.

Second that fixture is junk, anything with a 48 white to 16 blue ratio is going to look terrible on an SPS tank. You'll spend more in the long run using fixtures like this.

spit.fire 03-11-2013 09:12 PM

I grew sps under marineland reef brights :p

After I cut the fixture apart and replaced all the emitters with 3w emitters haha

But by the time you do that you might as well skip buying a freshwater capable light and buy a real led fixture

spit.fire 03-11-2013 09:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kafudafish (Post 801200)
/\ what he said. White light is made up of every color which makes it full spectrum

There aren't red,green, blue, suns in the sky.

I always thought the sun was orange :(

Aquattro 03-11-2013 09:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by spit.fire (Post 801209)
I always thought the sun was orange :(

I dunno where you guys live, we don't have any sun here at all!!

kien 03-11-2013 09:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Aquattro (Post 801213)
I dunno where you guys live, we don't have any sun here at all!!

We don't all live under a rock. Just sayin'.

spit.fire 03-11-2013 09:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Aquattro (Post 801213)
I dunno where you guys live, we don't have any sun here at all!!

I see it ever couple weeks for a few hours

Aquattro 03-11-2013 09:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by kien (Post 801219)
We don't all live under a rock. Just sayin'.

I live ON a rock, not under it. Mostly..

FragIt Dan 03-11-2013 10:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kafudafish (Post 801200)
/\ what he said. White light is made up of every color which makes it full spectrum

There aren't red,green, blue, suns in the sky.

Just to clarify, white light CAN be made up of every color, but not to a significant degree. This is why you might choose a cool white vs a warm white light. With respect to keeping corals, white LEDs do not meet a coral's photosynthetic requirements on their own, and thus I would argue are not full spectrum.

Quote:

Originally Posted by mrhasan (Post 801187)
Just to add something (since I drooled over and studied full spectrum LEDs vs BW LEDs few months ago):

there's no legitimate proof that full spectrum helps coral growth. For now, people only still to it for aesthetics. Or maybe some study did came up showing full spectrum helps coral growth :idea:

The article found here is one that summarizes the need to provide light to corals across a much wider spectrum than most commercially available LED fixtures do.

Figure 4 shows zooxanthellae light absorption... of particular interest (to me) is the area between 400-440nm, which most LED fixtures lack.

Figure 8 shows what you get out of different wavelengths from your corals. Take a look at the spectrum below 440nm and the fluorescent pigments that glow as a result of exposure to this light (you get no purples without UV light).
Figure 23 shows you output from a high quality, commercially available LED fixture. Again, note the absence of support in the UV spectrum.

I have been testing LEDs for the past 6 months or so and have just installed a "full spectrum" DIY fixture on my frag tank. Initial testing of this has shown ridiculous color response from corals exceeding what I am currently getting from 14K Hamilton bulbs with actinic supplementation.

There are many other 'scientific' articles out there supporting the need for full spectrum lighting over corals. Of course you can play with the term 'need' and say that they will 'survive' under something less, but none of us are looking for that :). Ask anyone who has moved from good Halides to LEDs what they think of their colors...

Just my $0.02,
Dan


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