thanks tom
i want big bright fish and the lighting to pop the colors. the lights are 110w vho. i only want to add plant for decoration and hiding spots for the fish. like 6-10 plants so i am not sure if i should spend the 200$ on the co2 system. also what bulb combo l use, i was thinking 2 10,000k and 2 6,500k
Well, fortunately, you can spend maybe 100$ or so if you are thrifty for the CO2.
Ebay CO2 regulators, they often go for 10-30$.
Then a needle valve(maybe 15-30$)
Now you just need a gas tank, local fire supply places sell them refurbished for about 40-50$.
Best 100$ you ever spent.
Believe it or not, colors look better at lower, not higher light for fish.
Not for photography, but to our eyes.
Say 1.5w/gal and nice deep color bulbs that high light blues and reds.
You have very few color options with VHO, PC you have many, T5 you have many.
So for fish highlighting, PC/T5 would be the bess options for that goal.
Since plants are secondary, I'm guessing you might be after something like this:
http://showcase.aquatic-gardeners.org/2004.cgi?&Scale=3&op=showcase&category=0&vol=3&id=141
The plants are well cared for here, the water changes are done often.
CO2, higher light etc.
I use lighting at angles to direct the light on the sides of the fish and not on the glass(grows algae there). That might be of use to you.
This is a tank I did for a client:
You will note: the darker planted background high lights the fish well.
The lighter, whiter example washes out the color, but gives a nice bright feel to the aquarium.
Really depends on the goal you are after.
This client wanted an overgrown dark forest look.
I like cardinals for my 180, and the clor seems bright, that's because I turned on the HQI lights for this pic, but the tank typically only used the PC lights and then at 14" high over the aquarium, so it's not that intense.
Dark moss looks good, you can also do something like this which is mostly wood for a background:
I'd chose tough plants, and then use low light.
CO2 will certainly help, and once set up, CO2 is pretty simple and easy to use. Still, with good water changes, light is stable, nutrients are easy, this leaves a little tweaking of CO2 to optimize the tank.
Then you have a good focus on the fish, the plants and the overall display.
If you chose a good selection of plants, eg Crypts, maybe some Amazon swords like the Discus example above from Jeff, then you are in good shape.
Likely only need one bank of the lights, then turn the other bank on for viewing only.
The other option is to get fish viewing lights only and mount at a 30 degree angle going back towards the plants.
Regards,
Tom Barr