Quote:
Originally Posted by Skimmer King
Holy heck ron thanks alot the 400 w that isnt a problem sinceI use to have 250's over my tank the tank, houses Aussie Acans & LPS and 3 clams squamosa 10", 8" 5".
what is the average price of LEd's the cool white and Royal blue ron , is thee another place that you can get them from other then led supply.
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Ahhh, I looked at things again and I thought you wanted high PAR for SPS. In that case you could use 60 degree optics and fewer LEDs space 2.25 inches apart. That would give you 25 LEDs per row if my math is right? That sounds about right as I used 20 LEDs for 4 feet with this configuration and you are one foot longer.
LEDs run USD $5 to $6 each mounted on stars. You could try nanotuners.com and see if they can give you a good deal on LEDs, drivers, optics etc as a large package deal? Some people really like Cutter Electronics in Australia or also ETG Tech in the US for larger buys.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jeff000
Couple things.
50/50 split you will get very white light. I much prefer the bluer look like 20000k MH. So 2 blues to every white. Also keep in mind the whites are brighter then the blues to start with.
Get dimmable drivers (only a couple bucks more) so you can have more control.
I have to disagree with your optics recommendation.
see this thread,
http://www.reefcentral.com/forums/sh...ght=led+optics
70 degree optics provided the best results.
I do agree the meanweel drivers are the best buy.
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But if you run dimming drivers you can then fine tune the colour temperature to exactly where you want it. 2 blues to 1 white will not give you the option to go more white if you want to.
That reefcentral article is okay but the problem is that he simply changed optics and did not adjust LED spacing. The two have to go hand in hand. If you go narrower optics for greater penetration of light into deeper tanks you need to space the LEDs closer together to get additive PAR. His results are not surprising given the way he did it. The conclusion is that for the spacing of LEDs he used 70 degree optics are best at the particular distance he measure PAR. If he had spaced the LEDs closer together and used tighter optics he would have likely seen higher PAR. This was not a scientific study that can generally be applied to all LED setups, only to those particular strips he used at the depth he measured.