Sherita
Thu, 28th Feb 2013, 08:34 PM
I decided when setting up the 2'x5' frag tank that I wanted to experiment a little with the lighting. It seems to have almost become a competition to see who can spend the most on their lights, a competition I have no interest in taking part in. So I decided to go the opposite direction. I bought a cheapo Chinese 48" 54w 8 bulb T5HO grow light, rewired it so that I have two cords controlling four bulbs each (one cord for actinic, one cord for daylight), and installed cheapo Chinese T5 bulbs. So far, the light output far exceeds anything I would have expected, so much so that I am about to install charcoal windowscreen under the light to cut it down some. The light came with a highly polished aluminum reflector, and an enameled steel housing that is quite sturdy. The only down side was the need to rewire it for two cords instead of one so that I could run it through my controller.
The corals are loving it, the electric meter is loving it (no halides on this tank!), and I'm tickled to death with the amount of growth and color I'm seeing on the coral. Granted, this isn't a "blue light special" tank with massive amounts of blue that distort the true color of the coral. But since I actually enjoy seeing what the coral looks like naturally (been a diver for years), and the whole idea in this tank is growth...........well, color me impressed.
The light cost me $165 shipping included
the bulbs were $8/each, so $64 there plus $8.99 shipping
Total cost: $237.99
I'm going to check and see if I can find this light in a 36" model. If I can, there will be two of them over my 6' 210g tank when it goes up. Not investing in ridiculously expensive lights leaves more money for the things I want.........rare corals and rare fishes :)
The corals are loving it, the electric meter is loving it (no halides on this tank!), and I'm tickled to death with the amount of growth and color I'm seeing on the coral. Granted, this isn't a "blue light special" tank with massive amounts of blue that distort the true color of the coral. But since I actually enjoy seeing what the coral looks like naturally (been a diver for years), and the whole idea in this tank is growth...........well, color me impressed.
The light cost me $165 shipping included
the bulbs were $8/each, so $64 there plus $8.99 shipping
Total cost: $237.99
I'm going to check and see if I can find this light in a 36" model. If I can, there will be two of them over my 6' 210g tank when it goes up. Not investing in ridiculously expensive lights leaves more money for the things I want.........rare corals and rare fishes :)