Watts/Gallon has become PAR. PAR stands for Photosynthetically Active Radiation. It is the a measure of the light photons that are within the light frequencies used by plants (generally the blues through the reds -- quite similar to the light we can see). I think PAR has become popular because PAR meters became (semi) affordable and watts/gallon became useless with the many different kinds of lights available now.
I have looked for the "one true" web site that explained all of this clearly, but haven't found it. Maybe someone else has and can post a link. For now, I'll just explain what I've discovered over the past few months.
If you want to geek out, you can become a member of
http://www.gsas.org/, check out the club's PAR meter, measure the PAR your current lights get you, and attempt to match what you currently have with LEDs that claim certain PAR output. You would also then know if you're looking to implement what today is called low, medium, or high light. The PAR ranges for each is up for debate, but generally people agree that "low PAR" implies no need for CO2 or even a lot of plants, "medium PAR" suggests that you should have a good number of plants and CO2 may be useful or you'll at least need to keep the lights on a timer with short on times to avoid algae, and high light definitely needs lots of plants and CO2 to avoid algae issues.
Trivia: a measure that attempts to capture how
useful a light is for plants is called PUR (Photosynthetically Usable Radiation). Nobody uses PUR to judge LEDs because the science isn't there. Every plant absorbs light differently, and there is even conjecture that plants adapt to the spectrum they are receiving.
If you want to see a PAR meter in action (in fact, I think it is the GSAS par meter), you can see Cory using it in this video:
[youtube]-I-fUrI5mwo[/youtube]
and this:
[youtube]vD7QaRzf1Qw[/youtube]
Recently our member Vickmak did some comparisons with the same PAR meter and reported results in this thread:
http://www.wafishbox.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=22&t=11395.
My guess is your 180 is two feet deep. "Word on the net" is that the Finnex Planted+ gets you medium to medium high light, and is suitable for tanks 18" deep and shallower. At two feet you're into more serioius territory. E.g. Finnex Ray2 or even
http://www.buildmyled.com/'s XB series. You can go even higher end (but buildmyled is as expensive as I've ever researched).
Note: the buildmyled people suggest that if your tank is 18" or more front-to-back, you're better off with two strips.
The buildmyled site has an estimator tool. Choose a light (e.g. the "dutch planted") and it'll ask you your tank size and desired light intensity. It'll then suggest how many lights to get. They also suggest you get a dimmer, as generally when you get just 2 or 3 light strips you'll want finer control than turning your lights on and off in thirds. Looks like you're at almost $1,000 to go through them!
There are budget friendly DIY approaches, especially if you have a canopy to mount stuff in. I'll let others comment on those ... I've ignored them because I have an open top tank, no canopy.
My personal story is that I've got a "Fluval Aqualife" over my 3 foot open top tank. It was too bright, so I bought a "Current USA Ramp Timer Pro" to dim it. I don't recommend this approach if $$ is a concern -- I got poor value for my money. I think I could put one or two Finnex Stingray on my tank and be quite satisfied.