We've known for a long time that the blue/white combination grows well, I just don't see why a company would put out a new fixture that doesn't incorporate aesthetics as well... Buying a fixture that lacks the full RGB function is akin buying an unpainted car in my opinion - It's just an incomplete product.
White light spectrum is the entire range of colors visible so it certain includes red and green. But how much red and green light is actually available under water in the ocean? Quoting the article below at the depth of 8ft red starts to fade and is filtered out of the visible light spectrum by 14 ft.
I think we should make sure not to lose site of these sentences. You do not need a red or green LED to have red or green spectrum in your tank. The proof is, look at tanks with just white LED...you can see red and green in the tank, if there were no red or green in the light you wouldn't be able to see red or green in the tank. Once you dive past a certain depth...14 ft sounds right...you don't see any red...I dove with a girl who was wearing a pink wet suit...the pink quickly disappeared and it turned blue until we got back closer to the surface.
Just a reminder, things aren't actually any particular color, they just reflect a certain color...all color comes from the light...no red light... no red object, or coral, or fish...if you see something that is red, then red has to be in the light that is reflecting.
so there is no loss of red coloring? when using the AI SOL Blue?Under blue LEDs, red corals look like they are on FIRE.
Someone made a comment about the radions being visually pleasing..... Does the specific red and green LED's provide that?