amdphenomx4
Non-member
The term small is quite relative here. The volume being lit is a 60G cube. For LEDs I used 6 Luxeon M in a very white configuration with the following diodes:
2 x 90 CRI min 3000K L73G
2 x Royal Blue B5G
2 x 80 CRI 5000K R33G
The bin is after the LED color. These are all using relatively good bins for the $5.00 I paid for each of the diodes, and all have been reflowed and work. I did damage a royal blue pad but it still works fine so they are quite durable for the size.
They were reflowed onto Sinkpad MCPCBs which have a great heat conductivity compared to other MCPCBs and they are working fine as of now. I used a 96.5Sn-3.5Ag reflow solder to attach the LEDs to the MCPCBs. It is also extremely conductive for heat which is why I chose it. I attached the chart I used for reference.

The heatsink is a RapidLED 12" predrilled 1.5" wide black anodized with a 5W fan to keep the heatsink just a bit warm to the touch. The LEDs are being powered with 3 Meanwell LDD-1000HW drivers.
I went with high CRI diodes to better match the sun as well as have more color in the coral. Higher CRI lights have more output past the 550nm range.
As this is a test light, I am using 2 18.5V laptop PSUs in series to have the 24V for 2 Luxeon M at 1000mA on 3 LDD-1000HW drivers.
Aside from that, a link to pictures of coral under a 12000k halide vs the LED test. The white balance is manually set so the difference is due to lighting. It is overly blue and I unfortunately cannot shoot in RAW. A lot of purple that isn't there in real life.
http://imgur.com/a/K4QEw
I will be doing a test for a month or so to see how well corals grow as well as how color changes to see whether I need additional colors added, optics, or more light in general. They are running at 100% as of now, so they should be around as powerful as the 120W fixtures commonly used and without optics. My goal is to have an extremely low number of LEDs to light a large area with good coloration and growth.
For the first observations I have, the purple in the Tricolor Acropora is incredibly purple compared to under the halides. Some colors are duller due to the lack of blue, but some stick out better.
The stars (punny) of the show...
http://i.imgur.com/k6V8flkh.jpg
2 x 90 CRI min 3000K L73G
2 x Royal Blue B5G
2 x 80 CRI 5000K R33G
The bin is after the LED color. These are all using relatively good bins for the $5.00 I paid for each of the diodes, and all have been reflowed and work. I did damage a royal blue pad but it still works fine so they are quite durable for the size.
They were reflowed onto Sinkpad MCPCBs which have a great heat conductivity compared to other MCPCBs and they are working fine as of now. I used a 96.5Sn-3.5Ag reflow solder to attach the LEDs to the MCPCBs. It is also extremely conductive for heat which is why I chose it. I attached the chart I used for reference.

The heatsink is a RapidLED 12" predrilled 1.5" wide black anodized with a 5W fan to keep the heatsink just a bit warm to the touch. The LEDs are being powered with 3 Meanwell LDD-1000HW drivers.
I went with high CRI diodes to better match the sun as well as have more color in the coral. Higher CRI lights have more output past the 550nm range.
As this is a test light, I am using 2 18.5V laptop PSUs in series to have the 24V for 2 Luxeon M at 1000mA on 3 LDD-1000HW drivers.
Aside from that, a link to pictures of coral under a 12000k halide vs the LED test. The white balance is manually set so the difference is due to lighting. It is overly blue and I unfortunately cannot shoot in RAW. A lot of purple that isn't there in real life.
http://imgur.com/a/K4QEw
I will be doing a test for a month or so to see how well corals grow as well as how color changes to see whether I need additional colors added, optics, or more light in general. They are running at 100% as of now, so they should be around as powerful as the 120W fixtures commonly used and without optics. My goal is to have an extremely low number of LEDs to light a large area with good coloration and growth.
For the first observations I have, the purple in the Tricolor Acropora is incredibly purple compared to under the halides. Some colors are duller due to the lack of blue, but some stick out better.
The stars (punny) of the show...
http://i.imgur.com/k6V8flkh.jpg
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