Thanks Mbodell that obviously explains the mechanics better then I could have.
My explanation because I was both tired of arguing and tired in general failed to really get across my point. Bulbs use electricity to produce light. The inefficiencies of each bulb produce a byproduct. In MH as Mbodell explained you have electricity going through a metal that when excited produces light, which you are trying to produce and heat as a secondary output which you don't want. So the more efficient a bulb the less heat you would give off. If you look amount of electricity used to produce a measurable amount of light between two bulbs the excess electricity used by bulb A vs bulb B will have to be a byproduct of some sort generally heat. Thus if a bulb A is less efficient then bulb B it will give off more byproduct(heat) then bulb B. MH vs T5
On a secondary note check out JerseyWendys post today in tale of tank if you don't think T5 is a good choice for SPS
My explanation because I was both tired of arguing and tired in general failed to really get across my point. Bulbs use electricity to produce light. The inefficiencies of each bulb produce a byproduct. In MH as Mbodell explained you have electricity going through a metal that when excited produces light, which you are trying to produce and heat as a secondary output which you don't want. So the more efficient a bulb the less heat you would give off. If you look amount of electricity used to produce a measurable amount of light between two bulbs the excess electricity used by bulb A vs bulb B will have to be a byproduct of some sort generally heat. Thus if a bulb A is less efficient then bulb B it will give off more byproduct(heat) then bulb B. MH vs T5
On a secondary note check out JerseyWendys post today in tale of tank if you don't think T5 is a good choice for SPS