Aqualund
New member
Okay so this summer brought many changes with my home display tank, which is comprised of mostly sps corals. Prior to this summer, I was running a DIY led build and dosing with 2 part. I ran this system like this for nearly 2 years with great success and fully confident I had mastered the art.
Now, at the beginning of June I got fed up with constantly repairing the DIY leds (arduino), and intrigued by the allure of more pop in my sps so I switched to a T5/LED DIY combo. So now I have 4 T5's and 36 leds over my 120Gallon tank.
Around this time I also switched from Full 2 part to easing into a Calcium reactor dosing system as well. This transition did not go well as for a couple of weeks a lot of components failed (solenoid, gear, etc) causing havoc in the stability. It got so bad that I had to remove colonies and bring them to my coral farm to keep from losing them.
Once I got everything stabilized around July I started reintroducing corals back into the display. Only now, corals that were once fuzzy and luxurious barely show their polyps.
My system is as follows:
Ca: 440
Mg: 1360
Alk: 3.9
Sg: 1.025
NO3: .25ppm
PO4: .016
Leds ramp up at 8am, stay at 100% for 10 hours (there's only 36 3watt cree leds...they arent giving all that much par) then ramp down at 8pm.
The 4 T5's come on at noon and go off at 6pm. My par is about 250-350 in the areas where the corals in question are located during peak light cycle. When the t5's are off it's about 150.
I have two MP40's and a Hydor providing excellent movement inside the 120, along with the return that is cycling at about 12 times an hour.
I run a bio pellet reactor and a gfo/carbon reactor.
I feed the corals once a week, home cultured plankton (nanno) and amino acids.
I dont have any metal exposed...and I ran a magnet into and around the rocks and sand just to be sure.
No stray voltage.
The color of the corals isn't that bad...the sps have decent pigmentation...it's just that their polyps definitely do not want to play.
My stylophoras, pocilliporas, montiporas, and lps/softies are all doing just fine and nice and fuzzy. This is specific to my acropora variations.
So, since I am at wits end...I would love some insight. Is it just too soon to expect a turnaround? Is this just going to take six months for the corals to pop back into shape?
It's hard because I've never had this issue...usually things would always get back to business after a hiccup in a matter of days. Not weeks/months like this.
Photos:
<iframe class="imgur-album" width="100%" height="550" frameborder="0" src="//imgur.com/a/Zkaws/embed"></iframe>
Now, at the beginning of June I got fed up with constantly repairing the DIY leds (arduino), and intrigued by the allure of more pop in my sps so I switched to a T5/LED DIY combo. So now I have 4 T5's and 36 leds over my 120Gallon tank.
Around this time I also switched from Full 2 part to easing into a Calcium reactor dosing system as well. This transition did not go well as for a couple of weeks a lot of components failed (solenoid, gear, etc) causing havoc in the stability. It got so bad that I had to remove colonies and bring them to my coral farm to keep from losing them.
Once I got everything stabilized around July I started reintroducing corals back into the display. Only now, corals that were once fuzzy and luxurious barely show their polyps.
My system is as follows:
Ca: 440
Mg: 1360
Alk: 3.9
Sg: 1.025
NO3: .25ppm
PO4: .016
Leds ramp up at 8am, stay at 100% for 10 hours (there's only 36 3watt cree leds...they arent giving all that much par) then ramp down at 8pm.
The 4 T5's come on at noon and go off at 6pm. My par is about 250-350 in the areas where the corals in question are located during peak light cycle. When the t5's are off it's about 150.
I have two MP40's and a Hydor providing excellent movement inside the 120, along with the return that is cycling at about 12 times an hour.
I run a bio pellet reactor and a gfo/carbon reactor.
I feed the corals once a week, home cultured plankton (nanno) and amino acids.
I dont have any metal exposed...and I ran a magnet into and around the rocks and sand just to be sure.
No stray voltage.
The color of the corals isn't that bad...the sps have decent pigmentation...it's just that their polyps definitely do not want to play.
My stylophoras, pocilliporas, montiporas, and lps/softies are all doing just fine and nice and fuzzy. This is specific to my acropora variations.
So, since I am at wits end...I would love some insight. Is it just too soon to expect a turnaround? Is this just going to take six months for the corals to pop back into shape?
It's hard because I've never had this issue...usually things would always get back to business after a hiccup in a matter of days. Not weeks/months like this.
Photos:
<iframe class="imgur-album" width="100%" height="550" frameborder="0" src="//imgur.com/a/Zkaws/embed"></iframe>
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