How much light for a refugium?
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- Scott
- Goby
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How much light for a refugium?
I am going to set up a refugium and wondered how much light would you consider to be the minimum that could be used. Right now I have a 6 gallon Eclipse light (I think it's 8 watts) over some macro, but I have a LOA light that I can use.
Wanted: to set up a tank again.
I've got a 55watt pc over mine. I sure a 36watt pc would be fine. You can get Pc bulbs and workhorse ballast that are already riged up really cheap on ebay. I bought a 36 watt 2 bulb setup for my frag tank and it came with the rubber endcaps, ballast, two bulbs, bulb holders, and a reflector for around $40. I think, I could be wrong but it was cheaper than buying all the parts and putting them together myself.
- KrazyPlace
- Astrea snail
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I have a 65W LOA (6500K) from Home Depot over a 10G without any additional cooling. The macro growth is very good! Several people have seen my refugium and will tell you it is more than adequate.

I have a 65G reef (4 fish & many corals) and a 29G fish only (4 fish, 3 starfish, and inverts) that flow through this 10G refugium. My nitrates were between 30-50ppm the week before installing the refugium and I could not keep a coral alive. My tank was nearly a year old at the time too. With in 2 months of installing the refuge, the nitrates were at <1 ppm. Today they are now non-detect. I feed heavily each day a blender mix of shrimp, oyster, mussle, left-over flake food, pellet food, salt water, ammino acids, mysis & brine shirmp, and nori. My corals are doing great now that the nitrates are gone.

I don't know about anyone else, but my single LOA over a 10G refugium is a must have and more than adequate. Did I mention cheap?

I have a 65G reef (4 fish & many corals) and a 29G fish only (4 fish, 3 starfish, and inverts) that flow through this 10G refugium. My nitrates were between 30-50ppm the week before installing the refugium and I could not keep a coral alive. My tank was nearly a year old at the time too. With in 2 months of installing the refuge, the nitrates were at <1 ppm. Today they are now non-detect. I feed heavily each day a blender mix of shrimp, oyster, mussle, left-over flake food, pellet food, salt water, ammino acids, mysis & brine shirmp, and nori. My corals are doing great now that the nitrates are gone.


I don't know about anyone else, but my single LOA over a 10G refugium is a must have and more than adequate. Did I mention cheap?
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- snoopdog
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IMO you do not really need a ton of light over a refugium. But macro algea that is left in the refugium is growing very well with no light over it at all. Very hard to kill this stuff, i think Scott said he poured vinegar in the tank with his in 20 degree weather and it still did not die.
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