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#51
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I don't think anyone is arguing that this is the way to go or even the best way to light a tank. Its just yet another way that is working well for many. I know people with their halides on for 12 hours and by looking at the results (corals), you can't argue that they are wrong. Same way you can't say that TOTM I linked is not working out with his 6 hour photoperiod. |
#52
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![]() I'd love to see a chart of a PAR or lux reading taking on an hourly basis on a reef somewhere in the tropics just to see what the intensity curve really looks like.
Last time I checked the tropics were an even-Steven 12 hour day. To my Calgary eyes the intensity is all the same except for sun-up and sun-down. But the flip side is what is the difference between one million dollars and two million dollars? To a guy who has neither, they are both "wow that's a lot of money." But to someone else it may make a large difference. So that's why I say I'd love to see what a real reef encounters typically. Hey I'm all for a 6 hour halide day because I pay way too dang much for electricity per month and I need to find a way to reduce that .. but I want to be able to see my fish. I'm thinking maybe some supplemental T5's just to frame the actual intensity portion of the day. Starting to hear enough anecdotal evidence to believe that the reduced photoperiod is onto something but on the flip side I wonder if people are a little too eager to jump on the conclusion bandwagon. Sorry, not trying to be harsh but the fad bandwagon can really be a little bit silly in this hobby at times .. ![]()
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-- Tony My next hobby will be flooding my basement while repeatedly banging my head against a brick wall and tearing up $100 bills. Whee! |
#53
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EDIT: Missed that you mentioned an hourly reading. This would be nice to see actually. Again, I think it just all comes down to whats working for your tank. I have seen nothing but improvements after shortening the photoperiod. Perhaps the improvements in coral coloration and growth are a result of some other change or just an overall more stable system but I do know for sure that the improvement in my electric bill is the direct result of the lessened photoperiod--this is enough for me. I say don't change whats working for you. If you are having great results at 10 hours, stay there. If you aren't liking the tank and want to try something new, try shortening the photoperiod. Nothing to loose really. Lots to gain if it works for your tank. My 6 hours a day bulbs will last much longer now than when I was running them 9-10 hours a day. |