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Lighting and glass covers question
Group:
Has anyone found the results of studies on the effects of glass covers on the lighting intensity levels (amount of loss) and which particular wave lengths are most affected? I'm using 1/4" plate on my 120 to retard evaporation and also to keep the discus from wetting down the floor at feeding time. I could live with the water additions and wiping if my light quality/quantity is being significantly affected. The CF's have their own shielding so they'd remain protected from the moisture. Any factual information out there on this? Are there differences in types and/or thicknesses of glass? Thanks, Robert -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 80,000 Newsgroups - 16 Different Servers! =----- |
#2
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Lighting and glass covers question
Well - consider this. Glass light transmission is 72% vrs acrylic at 91% -
so if you need that cover on there, you can re-place it with some good acrylic and still have a cover on the tank. With a typical tank setup that uses 2 sliding glass panels for the cover (some are 2 peices hinged) there is a strip of double pane glass that will reduce the effectivness of your lights - say 1 glass pane will drop your lights down to 72%, and then a second peice will drop that by another 29% to ~50% of the original light - seems like a lot I know - but this is what all the experts tell me. Acrylic will help a lot, but if you can get away with nothing - theres a lot of additional light. I ended up using a peice of acrylic cut to shap so it only covered the front half of my tank, and the lights have nothing below them. "Robert" wrote in message ... Group: Has anyone found the results of studies on the effects of glass covers on the lighting intensity levels (amount of loss) and which particular wave lengths are most affected? I'm using 1/4" plate on my 120 to retard evaporation and also to keep the discus from wetting down the floor at feeding time. I could live with the water additions and wiping if my light quality/quantity is being significantly affected. The CF's have their own shielding so they'd remain protected from the moisture. Any factual information out there on this? Are there differences in types and/or thicknesses of glass? Thanks, Robert -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 80,000 Newsgroups - 16 Different Servers! =----- |
#3
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Lighting and glass covers question
In , "Mentaloid"
empowered us with this mighty blow against the Patriarchy: Well - consider this. Glass light transmission is 72% vrs acrylic at 91% - so if you need that cover on there, you can re-place it with some good acrylic and still have a cover on the tank. Does anyone know whether acrylic tank covers for glass tanks are commercially sold? I could hack one out myself, but just curious. |
#4
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Lighting and glass covers question
Does anyone know whether acrylic tank covers for glass tanks are commercially sold? I could hack one out myself, but just curious. A glass shop shouldnt charge more than a couple bucks to cut em for you. Be sure to use Lexan or = because most acrylic will warp when exposed to water on one side and not properly braced. |
#5
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Lighting and glass covers question
72% is higher than I would have guessed.
I use glass plates over my tank; are there certain colors of lighting that are absorbed more than others? For example, water tends to selectively absorb red light more quickly than blue light. I wonder if glass behaves similarly. Do you have any reference articles on this topic? -Bruce Geist "Mentaloid" wrote in message . .. Well - consider this. Glass light transmission is 72% vrs acrylic at 91% - so if you need that cover on there, you can re-place it with some good acrylic and still have a cover on the tank. With a typical tank setup that uses 2 sliding glass panels for the cover (some are 2 peices hinged) there is a strip of double pane glass that will reduce the effectivness of your lights - say 1 glass pane will drop your lights down to 72%, and then a second peice will drop that by another 29% to ~50% of the original light - seems like a lot I know - but this is what all the experts tell me. Acrylic will help a lot, but if you can get away with nothing - theres a lot of additional light. I ended up using a peice of acrylic cut to shap so it only covered the front half of my tank, and the lights have nothing below them. "Robert" wrote in message ... Group: Has anyone found the results of studies on the effects of glass covers on the lighting intensity levels (amount of loss) and which particular wave lengths are most affected? I'm using 1/4" plate on my 120 to retard evaporation and also to keep the discus from wetting down the floor at feeding time. I could live with the water additions and wiping if my light quality/quantity is being significantly affected. The CF's have their own shielding so they'd remain protected from the moisture. Any factual information out there on this? Are there differences in types and/or thicknesses of glass? Thanks, Robert -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 80,000 Newsgroups - 16 Different Servers! =----- |
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