Colin_BC
Fishaholic
Hi all. I am now in the process of building a new canopy designed for up to eight 8 compact fluorescents for my 30G. I currently use 60W of light (2x Power Glo, 1x Aqua Glo), CO2, fluorite substrate, and feed with Fluorish. I'm aiming for between 120W to 180W, or 4-6 watts per gallon. I'm going to use either just 6-8 23W CPF's or a combo of 23W & 15W CPF's. Is this going to be overkill? What WPG would be thought to be ideal? I have lots of plants already with varying degrees of light requirements, but mostly medium to high (Limnophila aquatica, a few red plants, etc.). I also plan on adding some glossostigma as soon as I can find it locally. My plans are below for any interested. Questions and criticism's always welcomed...
It's a simple and cheap DYI model. It's a wood box with an open bottom and a hinged top, built to the right dimensions to sit on the inner lip of the aquarium and still leave a couple inches of room for the heater and filter on the back. I am building it to the same dimensions of the glass canopy that my current lights sit on. Inside will be two cheap bathroom strip lights($12 ea + $8 for a grounded plug to wire to), each intended for 4x standard-socket light bulbs. I'm going to 6-8 spiral compact fluorescents ($5ea) for 4W-6W per gallon. I'm a bit worried about the heat generated from the compact fluoro's in the enclosed wooden box, so to counter this I'm drilling plenty of holes for airflow and will monitor with a thermometer. If the heat buildup is still a worry I will cut out a hole in the back small enough to attach a cheap computer case fan. The wood (oak laminate) is one 12"x97" piece sold intended for use as a shelf for $10. They're cutting it for me at the hardware place if I give them measurements. I just have to screw it togther and attach the lights. I live in an apartment where my only power tool is 12V drill. I try to keep anything I build is as KISS as possible.
Colin
It's a simple and cheap DYI model. It's a wood box with an open bottom and a hinged top, built to the right dimensions to sit on the inner lip of the aquarium and still leave a couple inches of room for the heater and filter on the back. I am building it to the same dimensions of the glass canopy that my current lights sit on. Inside will be two cheap bathroom strip lights($12 ea + $8 for a grounded plug to wire to), each intended for 4x standard-socket light bulbs. I'm going to 6-8 spiral compact fluorescents ($5ea) for 4W-6W per gallon. I'm a bit worried about the heat generated from the compact fluoro's in the enclosed wooden box, so to counter this I'm drilling plenty of holes for airflow and will monitor with a thermometer. If the heat buildup is still a worry I will cut out a hole in the back small enough to attach a cheap computer case fan. The wood (oak laminate) is one 12"x97" piece sold intended for use as a shelf for $10. They're cutting it for me at the hardware place if I give them measurements. I just have to screw it togther and attach the lights. I live in an apartment where my only power tool is 12V drill. I try to keep anything I build is as KISS as possible.
Colin