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As useful as estimating the number of blue jellybeans in opaque jar...Your right not many people have a par meter, but I can guarantee you every single one is trying to estimate to some extent how much their lights are outputting......
Not even close. I am saying that it is a real measurement that has very little real world meaning in the manner in which it is almost universally accepted and applied in this hobby.Your making it sounds light par is some sort of imaginary thing we all came together to make up?
Until you realize what "PAR" is actually measuring and understand that it is the wrong thing to be measuring. Explained above. It is similar to trying to discern the health of a diet based on the calorie count, not the content of what makes up those calories, but even worse, as we don't know what content (specific spectrum) that coral in general, let alone a given coral need.Different corals need different amounts of light.....PAR seems to be the easiest way to measure this?
And you don't need a "PAR" meter to tell you that. Nor does the number "123" mean that the acro will live or die. It may thrive at 123 PPFD of optimum spectrum and wither at 223 PPFD of sub-optimal spectrum. It may thrive under both, but take on wholly different pigmentation or structure under both. "PAR" does not tell you any of this. It is a "feel good" number from a tool that people think is important, for whatever misguided reason that has spread like wildfire through this hobby over the last several years.If i put an acro at the bottom of my tank in the shade its going to die....if i put an acan on the top of a rock being blasted its going to die.
