Wow! Can't believe I missed all these posts. I'll try to put my 2 cents (US
) in on as many questions as I recall from above posts (when answering, I can't see all the posts
There was a question regarding 24" t5 tube fixtures. Check out
.: Sunlight Supply - horticulture and aquarium lighting systems :. Website which is the brand I use in 4-tube 48". There is a 4-tube 24" listed. While they don't say there, I would suggest the 24" tubes are 2500 lumens a piece for 10,000 lumens total (4 tubes). This implies approx 800 foot candles at one foot distance below the lights. Sufficient for Phals and many low-light minis. These fixtures do not include bulbs, so budget in the cost of these as well. They should last at least a year and unlike regular florescents, they don't go dim during the burn life. They just go out.
Forget Home Depot - they don't sell t5. They do, however sell t8 which are pretty bright - just not as bright (or hot) as t5's. They only sell (to my knowledge) 2-tube fixtures. So check the link above for 4-tube fixtures. I personally would skip t8 and go to t5 from a hydroponics store or on-line. Otherwise you may end up at same conclusion I did: "why did I spend the money on t8?"
I grow under 4ea 48" t5 tubes and have considered going to 8 tubes. Yes there is a double light output, however it is spread over twice the area. My Orchidarium is 20" wide so the 20" fixture makes sense, and I figure I am getting about 2000 foot-candles at 6" from the tubes with 4 tubes. This isn't especially high for Phals, just more than they need. I grow mini Dendros and mini Maxillarias as well as Cischweinfias and a bulbo at 3-8" from the tubes and they love it.
Yes, the brightness of the t5's will amaze you when you first fire it up. Keep in mind, the tubes are made to run at something like 95 degrees F. This means the fixture will contribute a fair amount of heat to a setup. Not as much as Sodium, etc. but still a lot. I run a fan under my fixture all the time the bulbs are on to dispell as much heat as possible before it gets into orchidarium. My orchidarium (as I type this right now) is 81 degrees F under the lights and 78 degrees F at the tank floor (29" below the lights). I have been running the through-wall fan today otherwise the difference would be more dramatic.