Arduino aquarium lights

[Kalle Hyvönen] just finished building his own aquarium lights. He used four powerful soft-white LEDs, mounting them on a pair of heat sinks to keep things cool. Now he could have just connected them to the power supply and plugged it into the wall, but instead he included is own controller. An Arduino drives the switch-mode power supply, offering dimming thanks to PWM, and the ability to automatically switch the light on and off using an RTC chip with a battery backup. The sketch includes the ability to alter the lighting schedule and other variables by sending serial commands through a USB connection. This protocol is detailed with comments in his sketch.

We’ve seen a lot of interesting aquarium light projects. This one that uses heat from the LEDs to warm the water is one of our favorites. Others are full of features like this version that includes a moonlight mode. But Arduino enthusiasts don’t have to look far to find offerings like this PAR meter build, or this aquarium light controller library which can be recreated using the ubiquitous controller board.

Comments

  1. Faelenor says:

    That’s funny, it’s almost the same thing as I’m doing right now! Except that I’m using the AVR chip directly, not an Arduino.

  2. Rudager says:

    Someone should use an Arduino to create a shimmering LED effect like you would see underwater in the ocean. That would be cool.

  3. The light does shimmer quite a bit because of the surface of the water moving (because of the filter) and the LEDs being a pretty much a point source of light 🙂

  4. dude says:

    I have always wondered if other animals (like fish) see PWM powered lighting the same way we do. Our eyes cannot pick up the blinking of the lights. But can animals? That would be incredibly annoying.

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