- Joined
- Aug 8, 2015
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I run T5/LED hybrid nowadays. I will admit (even though how you speak and promote things feels like sandpaper) that my 150w sunpod with a 20k MH bulb was the key piece to my award winning 29g biocube back in 2010. Couldn’t keep the water under 80 no matter what I tried though.
the reason I like the hybrid is I get the T5 coloration and coverage and can adjust the led to supplement color by type. I could have my reef look like a 10k or a 20k with a controller, and I like that I can tune it to my liking. The main reason I think people went away from MH was heat and also electric cost.
But does it really use less power? Even BRS admitted in one of their later videos, that the idea of lower power consumption was never realized as the LED panels grew in power in numbers to try to mimic MH or T5. I think once you get into the 5' and larger tanks, the cost savings goes away. You need so many of the LED panels, that they begin to burn just as much power as a MH bulbs in good reflectors. On a nano, they do make more sense, just because MH's are too big and really work best on 24" to 32" cubes. They do put out more infrared, so they do produce some more heat. But in my book that isn't necessarily a bad thing, if you can manage the heat (the heat was never a problem to me) because it means they are putting out a broader spectrum, not just peak wavelengths.
I think they general rule of thinking with lighting is kind of where we were 10 years ago with skimmers...the only thing that mattered was airflow (because it was easily measured), so they were designed with only airflow in mind. Eventually people figured out that a skimmer with a 5" diameter neck on a 120 gallon tank wasn't a good thing. Now everyone is turning the air down and shrinking the necks back down. Although I do think the current needle wheel on a DC pump setup isn't the best way to achieve it.