thesassyindian
Supporting Member
DUDE!! This is insane!If I go DIY, I will probably do something like I did for the fuge:
https://bareefers.org/forum/threads/diy-fuge-leds-lumia-5-2.19689/
Let’s PCB’fy this thing!!
DUDE!! This is insane!If I go DIY, I will probably do something like I did for the fuge:
https://bareefers.org/forum/threads/diy-fuge-leds-lumia-5-2.19689/
Possibly.DUDE!! This is insane!
Let’s PCB’fy this thing!!
Just thinking about my wish list for lights:
1) Last for 20 years or so.
2) Zero or very low maintenance.
3) Dead silent all the time.
4) High efficiency, low power use.
Key design features that translate to:
1) No fans
2) Fully sealed electronics
3) Keeping the junction temperature as close to room temp as possible.
4) Quality components all the way through.
None of the lights out there really match that.
No-fans and low temp is of course the hard part.
Maybe it is time to go back to a DIY light.
My first DIY light was great, except it was only Royal Blue + Cool white.
Now that the LED color mix is pretty solid, I think I do know what to build.
Definitely interesting.never used these, but have you looked into Philips coral care? Fanless design.
CoralCare Gen2 LED Reef Light - Black Fixture
An exceptional LED light, worthy of your slice of the reef. The Philips CoralCare Gen2 rethinks reef lighting, combining the advantages of LEDs with the aesthetic light qualities of T5s to create a light with tunable spectrum and intensity for vibrant, healthy corals, while emulating the even...www.bulkreefsupply.com
How I understand it, in simple terms- Seeing all the individual led colors/temperatures in your tank that flicker or shimmer with water movement. individual colors showing up on the sand bed.What is the disco effect people talk about?
Ripples on the water can act like lenses. Focusing point lights above to point lights on the sand.What is the disco effect people talk about?
planned obsolescence combined with the desire to bring manufacturing costs means you're never going to get 20 years out of a product, plus there's the limitations of the product itself I mean we as reefers run LEDs WELL outside their specs just to crank more power out of them in a smaller fixture.
That said, I'm still willing to bet it's just the violet LED simply degraded the plastic to a point where it started to brown up, and as that happens then it's a runaway effect as the plastic then absorbs even more of the LED energy and leads with that melted look. Does the fixture not even turn on anymore? I assume you double checked all your other lights too?
I'd still send a complaint at AI over this, yeah they don't have to do anything, but who knows they might surprise you and actually do something.
Quite possible.So something you can do in the mean time, go into the spectral profiles for your lights and just turn those LED channels to 0% should be ok.
But I do think it's a UV thing with plastic, your picture I can completely see a "glaucoma" look to the primary lens, and the secondary lenses look frosted I'm guessing as a diffuser. It definitely looks exactly like what happened with my DIY bulbs though but only on the "UV" LEDs, none of the other LEDs went wonky.
Aah yes, I’ve seen some tanks with straight up “Windex” water. It does make the colors pop thoughKessil is really for people who like "blue" tanks. I don't.
Yes, they are adjustable, etc. But you can tell.
Hmm, interesting.There’s also this light that I forgot about. ATI Straton
ATI Straton: Connection Methods - Direct vs Network - ATI North America
There are two ATI Straton connection methods for programming. This article will share the benefits and drawbacks of each of them.www.atinorthamerica.com
As far as im aware, leds are rated to last for about 50,000 hours so LED lights should last around 10 ish years. The old AIs mentioned they would last over 13 with a 10 hour photoperiod https://support.aquaillumination.co...-Sol-lifespan-and-how-much-power-does-it-use-.Just thinking about my wish list for lights:
1) Last for 20 years or so.
2) Zero or very low maintenance.
3) Dead silent all the time.
4) High efficiency, low power use.
Key design features that translate to:
1) No fans
2) Fully sealed electronics
3) Keeping the junction temperature as close to room temp as possible.
4) Quality components all the way through.
None of the lights out there really match that.
No-fans and low temp is of course the hard part.
Maybe it is time to go back to a DIY light.
My first DIY light was great, except it was only Royal Blue + Cool white.
Now that the LED color mix is pretty solid, I think I do know what to build.
50k hours may be under ideal conditions, meaning not overdriven as most LEDs in our hobby are most definitely overdriven.As far as im aware, leds are rated to last for about 50,000 hours so LED lights should last around 10 ish years. The old AIs mentioned they would last over 13 with a 10 hour photoperiod https://support.aquaillumination.co...-Sol-lifespan-and-how-much-power-does-it-use-.
Cooling is a good question:...
That said that ATI Straton, talk about sleek looking design, but having seen a review on it I give up trying to be an armchair engineer, I wouldn't think passively cooling that running at 215 watts would be doable. ...