Thread
:
Watts per gallon rule
View Single Post
#
22
January 6th 07, 05:45 PM posted to rec.aquaria.marine.reefs
Wayne Sallee
external usenet poster
Posts: 1,181
Watts per gallon rule
hehehe I see that I have not gotten an answer from Kim on
this :-)
Wayne Sallee
Wayne's Pets
Wayne Sallee wrote on 1/4/2007 6:32 PM:
Since you think that watts per gallon is not the best way to go, then
tell us what method that *you* think hobbiest should use?
Please define this in such a way that any hobbiest can use your method
to see if they have enough light :-)
Wayne Sallee
Wayne's Pets
kim gross wrote on 1/4/2007 6:00 PM:
Add Homonym wrote:
RubenD wrote:
Watts per gallon is the worst measurement for light just because of
the
reasons you list. It does not take into account the depth of the tank
or where in the tank you are putting the creatures.
What is the best measurement for lighting then?
I supposed the coral under the bulb is the winner regardless of the
watts/gallon rule or the size of the tank, but how much light would be
acceptable? If I place the coral under the 30watts bulb, he'll be
getting
not 6w but 30w, right?
What you think?
Watts is not a measure of lillumination. LUX is the measurement of
illumintation. Lumens is a measurement of light output.
therefore it makes no sense to ask if a coral would be getting "30w"
of light.
The difference between lux and lumens can be illustrated thusly:
LUX will decrese with distance from bulb. How much a decrease there
will be needs to take many factors into account - distance from bulb,
what is in between (ie: water, glass, etc) and even the spectrum of
bulb.
LUMENS will NOT decrease, since the bulb is still just as bright no
matter how far you are from it.
Lumens is how much light gets put out, LUX is how much light is
reaching what you are trying to illuminate.
What we SHOULD all be using is LUX. It would make sense to say things
like "this crocea clam needs about 32000 lux", but I have never seen
that used.
As I stated in another responce on this thread. There is a problem
with lux. It does not weight the light according to photosythisys, IE
yellow and red add to lux but do not add much to photosynthisys. But
it is a much better measurement than watts per gallon since as long as
you know the spectrum of the lights or you are using a full spectrum
light source.
Kim
Wayne Sallee
View Public Profile
View message headers
Find all posts by Wayne Sallee
Find all threads started by Wayne Sallee