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Have you par mapped your tank or are you just blindly increasing par.In my opinion, the white channels make absolute sense in any aquarium with corals; in fact, just yesterday, a gentleman who has some beautiful tanks told me to run all channels at 100%. I have two Reef Flare Pro M lights on a Waterbox Infinia Frag 125.4 (roughly 80 gallons). The corals getting burned, I believe, is due to changing the light too quickly. I have all UV/blue/violet channels at 100%, and reds, greens, and whites at 25%. Now, he's told me to increase the percentages by 5% per week, no more than that, and reach 12 hours of light, 10 of which at 100% for everything, plus one hour of sunrise and one hour of sunset. This means it will take me 14 weeks to reach the total change without stressing the corals. I've started the process. But indeed, many years ago, when I used metal halide lamps, I had 800W of light on a similar aquarium, and the corals were doing great. Moreover, if algae grows because of the light, something is wrong; increasing the light doesn't mean you'll have algae in the aquarium. If anything, the problem is hidden and comes to light when you power up the lighting. This is my opinion.
shh!!! stop telling people our secret, man!I’ll always use white light in fact I run the whites at 100% on my fixtures as everything just looks healthier to me personally..
It's certainly takes some experience to interpret PAR values....as you found they aren't as cut and dried as folks like to think.In my opinion, a PAR meter can be used with a particular light on a particular tank, but using it to adjust a light based on a PAR reading from another tank or light is not going to work, there are just too many variables at play for it to have any useful meaning.
I don't think measuring PAR is all that necessary; when you have years of experience behind you, your eye is somewhat trained. Corals react differently to light, and in nature the same type of coral grows at 1, 5, 10, or 20 meters underwater. And the PAR levels are very different at each of those depths.shh!!! stop telling people our secret, man!
Yea kid of interesting.. Zoo clades present can change with depth.I don't think measuring PAR is all that necessary; when you have years of experience behind you, your eye is somewhat trained. Corals react differently to light, and in nature the same type of coral grows at 1, 5, 10, or 20 meters underwater. And the PAR levels are very different at each of those depths.
I was referencing white/daylight spectrum, not PAR. My comment was to troy's comment.I don't think measuring PAR is all that necessary; when you have years of experience behind you, your eye is somewhat trained. Corals react differently to light, and in nature the same type of coral grows at 1, 5, 10, or 20 meters underwater. And the PAR levels are very different at each of those depths.