The point of a PAR meter isn’t to grab an exact measurement (or at least that’s not how I see it)- it’s to aid in choosing an intensity that isn’t too high. Like I said you CAN get by without one just by simply watching your corals but if there’s a tool that can aid that process/the stress and possibly prevent losing any corals to start - why not use it?You are making my point without realizing it. It is not the 400, but rather what spectrum comprises that 400.This is not great advice. People routinely cook their corals with newer LEDs. Get one of those cheap 90 watt popblooms or whatever and you'll see how it's possible.
You'll find 400 par in the center and like 150 par 4 inches to the side on tons of LEDs if they're at an incorrect height and have poor spread.
200 of the wrong spectrum could burn a coral where 400 of the proper spectrum would allow it to thrive.
PAR and PUR are not interchangeable and we can’t measure PUR, nor do we have a PUR guidebook even if we could.
There was clear context to my statement. Any established fixture will have general sizing guidelines. Follow them and community feedback, and you will be fine. Some China black box with no reliable information? It is not a PAR meter that you need, but rather common sense. You ram the intensity over a period of time and stop when you get a negative impact. It makes no difference what a PAR meter reads.You might have success without a par meter but telling people that you can crank an LED to 100% and not kill anything is irresponsible.
Like I said you can take pics to compare days later. However, and this is my opinion and that is yours, PAR meters are helpful in gauging an idea. If your corals are dying and you assume it’s light (when really it was bad water quality or pests) a PAR meter can assist in confirming light isn’t the issue. They literally put PAR readings on the back of light boxes or in the manuals to help assist gauging where the light intensity should theoretically be set. So you claiming to use the manual/manufacture suggestions is still you supporting PAR readings because that’s where those suggestions come from. A manufacture didn’t throw corals in a tank, set the intensity by guessing, and say “hey I’m gonna sell this with this recommended intensity because this is what worked for me”. I would never crank a light to 100% ever to start with like you claimed in your original post but then just contradicted by saying you’d crank it slowly.
If that’s still your opinion that’s totally fine, it’s ok to have a different option!! I agree they aren’t a necessity so we’re halfway on the same page, but it’s ok to enjoy the tool also and I don’t think PAR meters have ever killed any of my corals.
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