Firstly, I am very aware about this "rule" you speak of breaking down and have long ago seen those sites. I've explained the concept on this site many times. That is why I can use a 20 watt light bulb on a 4 liter tank and not have it be insane. On a ten gallon, however, acts the rule isn't bent quite that out of shape yet. Light can increase or decrease gradually, there is no one point where something becomes high light - or very high light. I've spent years on APC and AB and TPT and I'm just telling you what I have seen.
I'm not sure who devised that "rule" breakdown you posted as there is no true "this means this" and "that means that" as far as I'm aware.
My 10g tank is considered high light at 3.6wpg (factor in the ah reflectors which have something like 168% reflectivity and its even higher). Often, anything over 4wpg can be considered "very high light." You can probably grow glosso in 2.8 wpg - and glosso is a high light plant. I'm not saying that 2.8wpg in a 10g is high light, but it certainly isn't low.
You know Harlock, I don't dislike you at all, but it seems everytime I post an opinion in a thread you have posted in, we get into some sort of debate. I don't have the energy for it
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I'm not sure who devised that "rule" breakdown you posted as there is no true "this means this" and "that means that" as far as I'm aware.
My 10g tank is considered high light at 3.6wpg (factor in the ah reflectors which have something like 168% reflectivity and its even higher). Often, anything over 4wpg can be considered "very high light." You can probably grow glosso in 2.8 wpg - and glosso is a high light plant. I'm not saying that 2.8wpg in a 10g is high light, but it certainly isn't low.
You know Harlock, I don't dislike you at all, but it seems everytime I post an opinion in a thread you have posted in, we get into some sort of debate. I don't have the energy for it
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