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#1
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Lumens are the most important - but as long as you stick to fluorescent
lighting you can just think of this as watts since the wattage of a bulb is usually easier to find. And yes, your tank probably could use some more light. There are two solutions for you to get healthy growing plants in your situation. The cheapest is to change your plants. Anubias and java fern will both do fine in 1.45 watts per gallon as will several other low light plants. The other solution is to get your lighting up to between 2 and 4 watts per gallon. Ways of doing this are to either replace your lighting completely with something in the 120 - 200 watt range or to just add a second fixture if the top of your tank has room for it. -Daniel |
#2
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If you choose to upgrade your lighting and are willing to try anything,
I would suggest you suspend a MH pendant above the tank. One 175 watt would do nicely and they go especially well with hex tanks IMO. MH lights seem to penetrate deeper tanks better too. |
#3
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On 14 Apr 2005 09:45:56 -0700, "dfreas" wrote:
Lumens are the most important - but as long as you stick to fluorescent lighting you can just think of this as watts since the wattage of a bulb is usually easier to find. And yes, your tank probably could use some more light. There are two solutions for you to get healthy growing plants in your situation. The cheapest is to change your plants. Anubias and java fern will both do fine in 1.45 watts per gallon as will several other low light plants. The other solution is to get your lighting up to between 2 and 4 watts per gallon. Ways of doing this are to either replace your lighting completely with something in the 120 - 200 watt range or to just add a second fixture if the top of your tank has room for it. -Daniel I have 5 tanks, 10gal, 29gal & 75gal, all the lighting for these tanks is less than 1.5watts per gallon. After losing my planting in my first tank (75gal), I learned about "Low light plants." One vendor sold assorted plants just for low light conditions. I bought a large collection (via internet, no LFS) and couldn't be happier (2 years later). One advantage to low light plants, no need to worry about aging flourescents, so long as the light up they are adequate. dick |
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