I've been reading and reading, but I'm still a bit stymied about lighting guidelines. Bare with me on this...
In photography there's the concept of neutral gray. The basic idea is you shoot a neutral gray card (18% gray) with your equipment while adjusting various parameter, f-stops, film speed, etc. The goal of being to find the combination of settings for your equipment that can perfectly dial in neutral gray. Once you learn how "far off" you equipment is, which all equipment is, you compensate for it.
If the goal is to get the right radiation for the species in the tank, why can't their be lighting "gray cards?" Physics is physics. SW has a well defined acceptable range. The same with water temperature, etc. It seems like someone should be able to state that a new MH @ 10K 10" off the water with these water parameters typically produces XXX radiation at 10", YYY radiation at 15", etc.
I realize that bulds vary by brand, but that's the point. If there was some reference point then people could say that brand A's bulbs run 10% below the reference, while brand B is 20% above.
It seems like this would allow you to get into the right ball park for your species, and then let you fine tune with lamp height, specimen placement, etc. From everything I've read, the debate seems to revolve around types of light, rather than radiation at depth. And too a noob like me, it seems like people just light the hell out of their tanks and hope for the best.
Or...I'm completely missing the point, which is more than likely.
Thanks
In photography there's the concept of neutral gray. The basic idea is you shoot a neutral gray card (18% gray) with your equipment while adjusting various parameter, f-stops, film speed, etc. The goal of being to find the combination of settings for your equipment that can perfectly dial in neutral gray. Once you learn how "far off" you equipment is, which all equipment is, you compensate for it.
If the goal is to get the right radiation for the species in the tank, why can't their be lighting "gray cards?" Physics is physics. SW has a well defined acceptable range. The same with water temperature, etc. It seems like someone should be able to state that a new MH @ 10K 10" off the water with these water parameters typically produces XXX radiation at 10", YYY radiation at 15", etc.
I realize that bulds vary by brand, but that's the point. If there was some reference point then people could say that brand A's bulbs run 10% below the reference, while brand B is 20% above.
It seems like this would allow you to get into the right ball park for your species, and then let you fine tune with lamp height, specimen placement, etc. From everything I've read, the debate seems to revolve around types of light, rather than radiation at depth. And too a noob like me, it seems like people just light the hell out of their tanks and hope for the best.
Or...I'm completely missing the point, which is more than likely.
Thanks