Schuber Wright Safari LED is an elegant 4 watt moonlight or nano spotlight

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The Schuber Wright LED is one of the most attractive nano lights we’ve seen in a quite a while. In some ways the he four watt Schuber Wright LED light could serve double duty, it could be a pretty looking moonlight or a nano spotlight, the same could be said about any four watt LED spotlight but the mounting option makes it stand out.

Schuber Wright’s four watt LED spotlight is supported by a very attractive side mounting arm which clamps onto rimless aquariums. The $90 package of the four watt Schuber Wright LED lamp and clamp comes in an actinic blue color with a desirable low wavelength peak between 439 and 456 nm, or a white color with an 8000K color temperature. More pics and video when you read on.

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  • Curtis Kramer

    I noticed the hinge on the clamp and that the light can rotate away from the water, but can it rotate towards the water? I haven’t see anything that allows the light to shine directly down on the tank (other than if the bulb was almost in the water). This concerns me. I don’t want to have to clamp the light to the front of the tank to have my corals facing me.

    Great design though. A great step forward in attractive lighting.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_3PQR2S2EAZUDJKVYUCKLCWJ37Q Micheal

    What’s with the additional heatsink around what looks like the screw in socket on a “par” bulb.   I can understand a heatsink where the LEDs are, but back there?

  • Anonymous

    That is one seriously overpriced moonlight. You can get a PAR38 bulb from rapidled for the same price and actually grow corals with it. This is 4w of LEDs, I don’t understand why any finned heatsink is needed, never mind the extra cosmetic looking one above the socket.

  • http://twitter.com/bnlowe bnlowe

    I think what this story forgets to point out is the True AC LED.  Apparently there is no converter and driver, meaning a longer lasting unit and more power out of the 4 watts.

    Edit: Or so they say:

    http://www.finnex.net/index.php?option=com_virtuemart&page=shop.product_details&flypage=flypage.tpl&category_id=37&product_id=285&Itemid=61&vmcchk=1&Itemid=61

  • Clive Bentley

    The information they provide on the site is a little confusing. They seem to go back and forth between “an innovative AC-DC converter” to them being AC only. There are a few AC LEDs on the market currently, but they have typically been warmer white (not the 8000K claimed on the site), and much lower efficiency than your typical 3W class LED. While the lamp may be more thermally efficient (taking the AC-DC converter out removes a few watts of heat), the LED itself isn’t.

    Chances are, the whites are the AC LEDs, while the blues are the typical AC-DC converted setup, but I’m just speculating.