I'd almost think that that would be too much. Are you sure the LED's are running at 3 watts. So many 55 LED units with 3 watt LEDs are actually running at 2.1 to 2.2 watts (120 watt units). I would also think that that would be enough light as well. JMTC
......Go with 120 degree optics and it will need to be hung around 15 inches for full coverage.
I’m not sure how you came up with 15 inches. If I look at simply trig with the known information, a height of 15 inches with 120 degree optics is spreading that light to approximately 52 inches. That is a whole bunch of light spillage. That is, a single LED bulb is emitting a cone of light with a radius of approximately 26 inches at the surface..
However, I do believe this fixture has 90 degree optics. Using similar trig calculations:
15 Tan (45) = 15
At 15 inches above the water, this calculates to a spread of 30 inches.
So I’d actually suggest the light be closer to the water then 15 inches. And since it’s 90 degree optics (Tan 45 equals 1), the spread is twice the height. So if you mount the light at 12 inches, the total spread is 24 inches.
Now that’s the mathematical theory…..practice might be different.
Guess my around 15 was not bad haha. What kind of coral are you planning on?
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Man, super envious of rob haveing that set up in the garage. I'd love a lathe, table saw and band store.
Everybody quotes the shrimp thing.....why not take some flake fish food and start to "feed" the tank. Same source of nitrogen, carbon and all sorts of other food groups that bacteria love. I mean,is this not the staple that will help feed your established bacteria anyway?
I have some crab meat I can use, but haven't added a bacteria source yet. Just was wondering if the natural background bacteria would start the cycle.