Thanks! It’s 36x36x16 the par readings vary, but range from the low 200’s up to 500 micro moles in the upper areas. This is on the 200w setting running at 80%.Awesome looking tank! What are the dimensions on it? Any PAR readings you can share?
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Thanks! It’s 36x36x16 the par readings vary, but range from the low 200’s up to 500 micro moles in the upper areas. This is on the 200w setting running at 80%.Awesome looking tank! What are the dimensions on it? Any PAR readings you can share?
Impressive. I’m thinking about using 1 Atlas over a 4’x2’x2’ tank that will eventually house softies and LPS. Am I better off getting 3 of his light bars for a similar investment? I just feel like the dimmable feature and adjustable wattage of the Atlas gives me more flexibility and will be easier to use on a different tank someday.Thanks! It’s 36x36x16 the par readings vary, but range from the low 200’s up to 500 micro moles in the upper areas. This is on the 200w setting running at 80%.
I honestly would choose the Helix bars for your tank. They’re dimmable, so you have some control on intensity and depending which color mix you go with, color blending/spectrum as well. You would need two Atlas fixtures to cover your tank properly. Unless you know that you’re upgrading to a different tank soon, I would pick lights that work for your current tank now. You can always add more bars in the future if you decide to keep more light demanding animals, so there’s room to upscale if needed.Impressive. I’m thinking about using 1 Atlas over a 4’x2’x2’ tank that will eventually house softies and LPS. Am I better off getting 3 of his light bars for a similar investment? I just feel like the dimmable feature and adjustable wattage of the Atlas gives me more flexibility and will be easier to use on a different tank someday.
I don’t think Luca listed the actual nm of each diode, but I recall him stating that he uses 4 different nm diodes to achieve the perfect blend. This is me paraphrasing, so don’t take “perfect” literally. My quanta pro MB has four sequencing lenses, whereas the new helix only has two, which increases the output by 15% and the blending is even better, if that’s possible? The pro version of the MB is great and there’s absolutely no separation of colors. If you’re looking for a more blue look with a great spectrum, then I think the MB helix is the choice.I see the spectrum plot on the sale page for the Helix units and I see the marketing below but is there a published list of LED chip wavelengths used? Looks like they use the "4 chips in 1" parts from the photos and the chip breakdown vs LED count (i.e. 6ft Meso has 240 LED's in 60 chips (30 Ch-A Violet, 30 Wide Band Blue)) but curious to see what wavelengths are put out. I want to replace my setup with bars for a more blue look but I'm not sure how they'd compare. I would hate to spend as much only to find its still more white than I was hoping for.
Helix advert:
"The Meso Blue and the Reef Crest Daylight spectrums were designed to be used together. Use a 1:1 ratio to achieve the coveted AB+ spectrum. Our bundle packs take the guess work out of the process and offer a Blue+ and a White+ option."
i currently run Reef Breeders Photon V2 and 4x T5's. Planning on going to 5x Helix bars and 4x T5's.I think if you’re supplementing decent lights, then you can add some cheap “blue” bars with a certain spectrum and you would be okay, but if spectrum, spread, blending and overall quality is your goal, I wouldn’t buy any other bar, especially for the money. There’s simply no comparison in my opinion.
This is what the new Reefcrest looks like The closest somewhat common light source that plots similar is a Geisseman lagoon blue or KZ Coral light.. .Thanks for the detailed response. Truth told I've been wearing Luca out on email. Was trying to not bug him much more. lol
Are you keeping the photon or replacing it? I’m not sure you’ll need the T5’s, the 5 bar combo will probably do the trick.i currently run Reef Breeders Photon V2 and 4x T5's. Planning on going to 5x Helix bars and 4x T5's.
Is the little red mark where it lands in the spectrum? I’m not sure how to read this time of spectral plot.This is what the new Reefcrest looks like The closest somewhat common light source that plots similar is a Geisseman lagoon blue or KZ Coral light.. .
I intend on replacing the photons. I'm sure I won't need the T5's but I'm too big of a fan to give them up. Want some "real" full spectrum light from a bulb. I'm just looking for more blanket coverage with the spread of the 5 bars. I'm sure they'll be turned down a decent bit. Though I'm curious how high I can take them. My current setup is turned to pretty high and my suspicion is if I can throw some more light down the coral, I hope, will pick up on growth some.Are you keeping the photon or replacing it? I’m not sure you’ll need the T5’s, the 5 bar combo will probably do the trick.
Yea that's it's spacial color coordinateIs the little red mark where it lands in the spectrum? I’m not sure how to read this time of spectral plot.
Yea the red x is like the dominant color of the blended light.Is the little red mark where it lands in the spectrum? I’m not sure how to read this time of spectral plot.
Yea that's it's spacial color coordinate
Yea the red x is like the dominant color of the blended light.
Simplist use is that 2 lights with the x in the same place should look the same.
And the predominant tone is, in this case blue.
This gives a bit more depth :
Color basics – CIE 1931 chromaticity coordinates; Chroma Meter - LISUN
Coordinate system - x, y Cartesian coordinate system.x – represents the relative magnitude in relation to red; y – represents the relative magnitude associated with green; z – represents the relative magnitude associated with blue. and z=1-(x+y)www.lisungroup.com
By itself it didn't really tell you how " white" it is.. My point was just to try to define it against other lights .