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![]() "g_i_n_k_o" wrote in message ... In rec.aquaria.freshwater.plants Reel McKoi wrote: : OK, now were getting somewhere. Regular old shop lights with a with : reflector. That is most likely the main problem. First off, the : reflectors on those lights are made to reflect light from a height so : yuo get decent light dispersion. The typical shop light reflector isn't that good, but it's not really much worse than the polished box reflector found in the vast majority of commercial aquarium fixtures. Ideally, something of a parabolic reflector for each tube works best at sending light straight down into the tank where one gets maximum penetration in deeper tanks. A commercial (and very expensive) fixture that does an excellent job at this is the T5 HO TekLight. The typical polished rectangular box doesn't send light down into the tank, but tends to bounce it around until it hits one of the fluorescent tubes. (The exercise of comparing a pseudo-parabolic reflector against a rectangular box via a geometry diagram is left to the reader.) Manufacturers compensate for the bad reflector by adding more tubes to the unit. These fixtures do work OK and the extra tubes aren't really much of an issue unless you have more than a few tanks which makes one much more interested in conserving electricity to reduce a very high electricity bill. I grow plants with highly efficient Tek Lights, and less effective polished box reflector fixtures. Both do OK. Medium light tanks are more forgiving, so those tanks get my old less efficient reflector light fixtures. As for algae and light, it gets tricker the more light you add to the aquarium. So for beginners, I recommend starting out with medium light level plants with a medium light level fixture. A cheap shop light with a simple reflector will do the job for this. It's not as effective as one with a parabolic reflector, but for medium light, it will be good enough. Bulbs are _not_ the primary cause algae, it's the water conditions. Adding more light just speeds up the growth of everything (desirable plants and algae). Poor water conditions under medium light will require you to monthly scrape off ugly algae. Poor water conditions under very high light will require you to daily scrape off ugly algae. My philosophy is that for the first year, it's better to take the cheap route and get some successes with easy-to-grow medium light plants than to take the expensive high risk route where it takes some real skill and experience to keep algae at bay. =============================================== I'm starting to think it's the nitrates and phosphates that come right from my tap! And the rain water I'm using is catching dust and providing more algae nutrients........ a losing battle unless I go for some expensive pads to remove these nutrients. -- RM.... Frugal ponding since 1995. rec.ponder since late 1996. Zone 6. Middle TN USA ~~~~ }((((* ~~~ }{{{{(ö |
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