Hey Folks, I have had tanks setup outside for over 10 years now. I tried it for business purposes and found that to be no fun, and for the past 8 years have done it purely for fun. Growing corals in direct sunlight is great. The growth is easily 3-4x faster than conventional lighting methods. The colors on most corals under the sunlight is much better. The colors that you get under sunlight are significantly different.
My outdoor frag tanks have always been part of my complete system. I currently have 1100g in my system. Part of that is a 140g frag tank, and a 250g rock sump that are both outside and uncovered. I have found that evaporative cooling is efficient, and replacing all that water with Kalkwasser is huge benefit to the corals.
The most frequently asked question is, "What do you do when it rains?". And the answer is the corals are already wet so they dont mind
The truth is with 1100g of water, and only about 24 sq feet of exposed surface area, when we get in So Cal it's not enough to make much change. And even on a rainy day with the amount of exposed surface area I have I still evaporate out a good quantity of water.
I am located in the San Fernando Valley, so I am about 15 Miles North East of the Financial district and 25 miles north of LAx - I am by no means out in the boonies.
Steve Garrett is another great example. Steve's outside system is larger than mine, and he is a successful commercial farmer with his system. His system is covered, and over the years he has used different colors and degrees of coverage over his system.
Steve's coral colors are much more representative of what the corals will look like under conventional lighting. And in fact Steve's corals once you get them color up even better under conventional lighting. Steve's got a great selection and I eagerly collect his corals when he is at the local swaps.
My direct sunlight gets some crazy colors out of corals, but those corals can't always be maintained under conventional lighting. But what I do mainly is get the brown acros, that are doomed to never be sold and put those outside. Sometimes they color up within 3-5 days. Sometimes it takes a few weeks. But over 90% of the brown corals I bring home color back up.
In addition, the health of my fish in the outdoors tanks is amazing. while the outdoor tanks are connected to the inside tanks, I don't specifically feed the other tanks. But the fish out there are amazing. I recently added several Juvenile Chevron tangs with advanced HLLE, and within a couple of weeks they were healed up and ready to find new homes.
Dave B