PAR Meter Recommendation

PharmrJohn

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As I start to collect hardware for my upcoming build, one of my purchases will be a PAR meter. As I am going to be fussing around with lighting, starting out with my old T5 fixture and moving to LEDs, I want to be prepared. And there's the possibility of messing with my aquascape as well. I can all but guarantee I'll modify that as I go.

So realizing that not all PAR meters are made with the same dedication to quality and engineering standards, which are considered to be superior? I'm not afraid to spend some cash so let's take cost out of consideration. As always, TIA.
 

Add about 15-20% to the reading and you will be in the ballpark. It's not the standard to which all are judged but works
 

Add about 15-20% to the reading and you will be in the ballpark. It's not the standard to which all are judged but works
I like my parwise. Pretty easy to use.
Would you folks think, knowing what you have, that a used meter would be a wise(ish) route to explore? Or are these meters prone to moving towards inaccuracy due to normal (or perhaps some possible roughish) handling (cause ya never know...... )?
 
If you have a laptop, then…


With


230$
 
Would you folks think, knowing what you have, that a used meter would be a wise(ish) route to explore? Or are these meters prone to moving towards inaccuracy due to normal (or perhaps some possible roughish) handling (cause ya never know...... )?
I don't think you will find a used unit cheap enough to make it worth while. Most people want pretty close to what they paid for them
 
Found an apogee mq-510 open box for 300 on saltwateraquarium.com. Works perfect. Keep an eye out and you can find deals. That’s top of the line if you ask me but just my opinion. I’ve use it every time I add a coral. Kind of overkill but I think it’s worth the peace of mind. Our hobby is expensive so you want to protect our sometimes big investments.
 
As I start to collect hardware for my upcoming build, one of my purchases will be a PAR meter. As I am going to be fussing around with lighting, starting out with my old T5 fixture and moving to LEDs, I want to be prepared. And there's the possibility of messing with my aquascape as well. I can all but guarantee I'll modify that as I go.

So realizing that not all PAR meters are made with the same dedication to quality and engineering standards, which are considered to be superior? I'm not afraid to spend some cash so let's take cost out of consideration. As always, TIA.

Apogee $341 - clearance at Premium Aquatics

Just connect it to your computer

There was a coupon code to stack with it but guessing it expired.

 
Found an apogee mq-510 open box for 300 on saltwateraquarium.com. Works perfect. Keep an eye out and you can find deals. That’s top of the line if you ask me but just my opinion. I’ve use it every time I add a coral. Kind of overkill but I think it’s worth the peace of mind. Our hobby is expensive so you want to protect our sometimes big investments.
That's a great idea. I'd just planned out a mapping strategy. But I could do both. Map and double check. It's not overkill. It just makes sense.
 
I've also heard of good things when comparing a VBR-Aqua PAR Meter and a Danoplus PAR Meter to an Apogee PAR Meter; both the VBR and Danoplus are ~$150.
Just to add some context for this (and to show how different the two are in numbers from the Apogee):

The first one is the VBR meter - the old sensors didn't need adjusted and pulled essentially the same numbers as the Apogee, while the new sensors need adjusted by the multiplier below (1.17x). The second is the Danoplus (it reads about 10% lower than the Apogee when taking underwater readings).
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It's your light, not the meter. @luxdium performed a comparison.
 
Just to add some context for this (and to show how different the two are in numbers from the Apogee):

The first one is the VBR meter - the old sensors didn't need adjusted and pulled essentially the same numbers as the Apogee, while the new sensors need adjusted by the multiplier below (1.17x). The second is the Danoplus (it reads about 10% lower than the Apogee when taking underwater readings).
Wow! Really good info! I am leaning towards the Danoplus. I'm not so concerned with a 'real' reading as long as I have the conversion factor. And 10% really isn't THAT much off when speaking of a range (e g. 50-150). Specific numbers, yes, but a range pretty much nullifies my concerns.
 
Wow! Really good info! I am leaning towards the Danoplus. I'm not so concerned with a 'real' reading as long as I have the conversion factor. And 10% really isn't THAT much off when speaking of a range (e g. 50-150). Specific numbers, yes, but a range pretty much nullifies my concerns.
Free returns. Try both, return the one you don’t like.
 
Did you get the Danoplus?
How was it? I just ordered it, also because I liked the readout better. We can compare when it gets here next week....
Nope. Not yet. I am setting up my tank, probably next summer. Gotta get my floors redone. And that's a next year thing. So it went on my ever growing list of things to get.
 

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%

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