SupraSPL
Well-Known Member
If it turns out that blue does the job, that would be very convenient since that is what LEDs are best at. Plus the blue is useful photo-synthetically useful and for controlling stretch.
So the % UVB of reptile lamps is relatively small but regarding UVA I have to make a clarification, the % UVA (~315-390nm) is very significant compared to the white light emitted. Here is the 2.0 vs 5.0 vs 10.0 (exo terra repti glo) T8. Of course these light sources are relatively low efficiency to begin with and they rely heavily on reflectors to deliver it, so if we could see a blue or cool white LED compared on the same chart it would be a huge wide blue spike going way off the chart.
So the % UVB of reptile lamps is relatively small but regarding UVA I have to make a clarification, the % UVA (~315-390nm) is very significant compared to the white light emitted. Here is the 2.0 vs 5.0 vs 10.0 (exo terra repti glo) T8. Of course these light sources are relatively low efficiency to begin with and they rely heavily on reflectors to deliver it, so if we could see a blue or cool white LED compared on the same chart it would be a huge wide blue spike going way off the chart.
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