Is this too much light on my system,

Reefgirl79

Community Member
View Badges
Joined
Mar 19, 2019
Messages
40
Reaction score
59
Location
Ontario
What state or country do you live in
Canada
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Hey all

I have a 25g lagoon which was being run with a standard Ai Prime not even at 100%.

I got an Prime HD for xmas and decided to run both for full coverage.

My tank has some monti's, stylo, up at the top, everything else is lps and rics.

I am simply not sure what the maximum percentages I should run my 2 primes at over this tank.

I use the BRS ab+ settings

Any insight would be great.
 
What percentages are you currently running them at? Any way we could get a snapshot of your current program?
 
What percentages are you currently running them at? Any way we could get a snapshot of your current program?


Lol. I have no idea how to do the snap shot. I'm so technically not inclined.

I have it on acclimation mode right now but I think my hubby set it up to the full ab+ settings which I think on such a tank will be too much.

I know my ai alone was

Rb 90%
B 80%
Uv 80%
V 75%
W 17%
 
Lol. I have no idea how to do the snap shot. I'm so technically not inclined.

I have it on acclimation mode right now but I think my hubby set it up to the full ab+ settings which I think on such a tank will be too much.

I know my ai alone was

Rb 90%
B 80%
Uv 80%
V 75%
W 17%

What are your red and green settings?
 
Lol. I have no idea how to do the snap shot. I'm so technically not inclined.

I have it on acclimation mode right now but I think my hubby set it up to the full ab+ settings which I think on such a tank will be too much.

I know my ai alone was

Rb 90%
B 80%
Uv 80%
V 75%
W 17%

2 options, both come with own risks.

1. Rent or buy a par meter. If your going to invest in one I'd recommend Senate. Can be used as a electronic monitor after setting up lights.

2. Start low and gradually increase if corals are browning. It's better to let them get a little brown and increase light rather than bleaching them out and reducing intensity.

White, red, green would bleach out corals faster than blue channels.
 
I'd want 2 on a 25.

A lot of people run the AB+ BRS prime schedule.

I run WWCs myself... 100% blues and violets and 10% for the rest during peak on my nuvo 10.

Rule of thumb is a single primes good for a 12" x 12" area if you intend to keep sps.
 
I'd want 2 on a 25.

A lot of people run the AB+ BRS prime schedule.

I run WWCs myself... 100% blues and violets and 10% for the rest during peak on my nuvo 10.

Rule of thumb is a single primes good for a 12" x 12" area if you intend to keep sps.

I run my light 100% blue, violet for 5 hours, half ramp down till off. I put sps on sides out of direct light. Position and par. Each tank is different especially if you are getting natural light. Start slow, and work it up. 5% every day or 3 worked well with me. Gives room for error. Just don't burn them. Harder to recover.
 
I'd want 2 on a 25.

A lot of people run the AB+ BRS prime schedule.

I run WWCs myself... 100% blues and violets and 10% for the rest during peak on my nuvo 10.

Rule of thumb is a single primes good for a 12" x 12" area if you intend to keep sps.


Prime hd spread is 24x24. Reg. Prime highest par is 18x18.

I've fried corals with a prime, easily and it wasn't even at 100%
 
I'd just start it em at 50% and see how things react. The corals will tell you what they need.

My nuvo 20 had 2 kessil a160s at 70% and 2 t5 bulbs. I'm sure that's similar total par
 
Prime hd spread is 24x24. Reg. Prime highest par is 18x18.

I've fried corals with a prime, easily and it wasn't even at 100%
Thats over open air and max spread. Plus manufactures always overestimate.

While you could keep lower light corals in a larger area, based on par readings with a dialed in spectrum optimal spread is 12x12.

I have a nuvo 10 mixed reef and run the peak spectrum mentioned above for 4 hours, with a 1 hour ramp, followed by 7 hours of just blues and violets at 100%.
 
Thats over open air and max spread. Plus manufactures always overestimate.

While you could keep lower light corals in a larger area, based on par readings with a dialed in spectrum optimal spread is 12x12.

I have a nuvo 10 mixed reef and run the peak spectrum mentioned above for 4 hours, with a 1 hour ramp, followed by 7 hours of just blues and violets at 100%.


My tanks not new. I ran the prime on my tank for 4 years. I only added the second 1 because of my rockwork which blocks certain areas.
 
My tanks not new. I ran the prime on my tank for 4 years. I only added the second 1 because of my rockwork which blocks certain areas.
Nitrates and phosphates absorb some of the light as well.
 
I run my light 100% blue, violet for 5 hours, half ramp down till off. I put sps on sides out of direct light. Position and par. Each tank is different especially if you are getting natural light. Start slow, and work it up. 5% every day or 3 worked well with me. Gives room for error. Just don't burn them. Harder to recover.

Mind showing a picture and sharing that file you run
 
Lighting is all about PAR and less so about what brand. We like strong blue so I run my lights at blues 50% and white 25%. This produces 230 PAR at the upper rocks and 165 PAR on the sand. Plenty of PAR for a mixed reef tank imo.
 
Prime hd spread is 24x24. Reg. Prime highest par is 18x18.

I've fried corals with a prime, easily and it wasn't even at 100%
I’d run each light at half of your settings before and slowly ramp them up SLOWLY. No more then 2% a week
 
Mind showing a picture and sharing that file you run

I think I need more light. My green staghorn is brown.

Screenshot_20190410-230601_AquariumLight.jpg
 
2 options, both come with own risks.

1. Rent or buy a par meter. If your going to invest in one I'd recommend Senate. Can be used as a electronic monitor after setting up lights.

2. Start low and gradually increase if corals are browning. It's better to let them get a little brown and increase light rather than bleaching them out and reducing intensity.

White, red, green would bleach out corals faster than blue channels.
Maybe auto-correct kicked in? Do you mean Seneye PAR meter?
 

IF YOU HAD TO TAKE A REEFING EXAM, WOULD YOU PASS?

  • Yes!

    Votes: 32 45.7%
  • Not yet, but I have one that I want to buy in mind!

    Votes: 9 12.9%
  • No.

    Votes: 26 37.1%
  • Other (please explain).

    Votes: 3 4.3%
Back
Top