Quote:
Originally Posted by ScubaSteve
There is, however, a maximum amount of light that corals can use. This level is called the saturation point, beyond which you start to get photoinhibition. I had the same question a while ago.
Look at Advanced Aquarist Magazine online; they have a lot of articles on this topic, particularly with respect to different algae clades. As stated above, too much light too fast = bad and lots of light can be good for growth, but there is a point where you start to get decreasing returns on the amount of energy you're pumping into the tank.
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you know we have been reading about this for about 6 or 8 years now and I have yet to see anyone one in real life that didn't get an increase in growth from better lights..
I think what people are confusing is that it takes a lot more light than we can give for an actual decrease in growth.. after all can we match the suns intensity for 8 hours? nope.
Now I do think we will see a point where there is no benifit to running your MH longer.. for instance, I used to run my MH 10 hours a day and the actinics 14 hours a day. I bumped up the MH to 12 hours but I didn't see a noticable increase in growth over a month so I went back to 10 hours, at 8 hours there wasn't as much growth as 10 hours. but I did not see a decline in growth from going to a longer period only that the growth remained constant.
but back to the original question Watt/gal is totaly useless and anyone who mentions it (as in a LFS) should be slapped as all it does is confuse people and allow inferior lighting to be sold and made to look better than it is. (I'll explain this in a bit so you understand what I am getting at)
now with T5's you will never reach a "To much light" situation so go ahead and add away.
Now to explaine my styance on watt/gal. I have explained this several times over the years but I won't make you search for it. because there are lots of newer people who have probably never heard it also.
there are two reasons why Watt/gal is useless the first one being light intensity and dept of penatration. I'll explain further.
take two tanks. say both are 10 gal and well say one is 4" deep 12" wide and 48" long. and the other one is 24" deep 12" long and 8" wide
put the same 50 watt light bulb above them and they both have 5 watts/gal, but is the light getting to the bottom of the tank the same?
not even close, you could probably grow SPS in the 4" tank, but would be lucky to grow mushrooms in the 24" tank.
the next reason is the quality of the light itself. now I don't want to turn this into a MH/T5/LED/Plasma/ect battle so I will use NO and VHO lighting in my example.
so this time you have two identicle tanks.. say 20 gal tanks 6 wide x12 deep x48 long.
over one you have three 32 watt NO bulbs for a total of 96 watts, over the other you have 1, 96 watt VHO. the intensity of the bulbs are different the VHO has a lot more depth at the bottom of the tank. to give you an example on a 12" deep tank a NO day light bulb was producing 18 PAR units, where a VHO was over 200.
so these tank have identicle watts/gal. but because the bulbs are different types the intensities are way different resulting in the NO lit bulb not much usefull for growing anything but algae at the bottom where the VHO in that size of tank would grow SPS.
so this is why I don't like watt/gal.. it is used to much to make products sound better than they are. now there is one place where they are ok. and that is when changing the amount of bulbs over a tank when you are sticking with the same bulb.
Steve