PWCs = Partial Water Changes.Thanks !!!!
In response to your above post:
1) revisit the sizing guideline per feeding. Estimate how many cubes/day you are feeding. Calculate the appropriate screen size based on that, then double it. That is the largest screen you should really need. Based on your last post, I would estimate between 4-6 cubes/day is what you're feeding, so a 10 cube/day screen should be more that adequate. 120 sq in. I have 5 tangs so add a sheet of 8" x 14" nori 5 days a week. I am now thinking 2 x 10" x 10" Plastic mesh would suffice....I am reading your new summary.
2) Algae scrubbers are not a quick fix, if "quick" means "right now, I'm losing my corals". you don't have time for an algae scrubber to fix that if that is happening right now. This is a long term solution. You need to build the scrubber, yes, but you also need to address the immediate situation which means you are probably going to have to do a series of PWCs, starting now. I have doubled my water changes and I change my GFO/Carbon weekly since I noticed this problem...that's how I got the phosphates down to .5, which isn't low enough.
3) 3ppm nitrates is nothing to worry about. Nothing. don't even concern yourself with 3ppm. Phosphate a 0.5 ppm, this is probably your biggest problem and could be the reason your corals are declining. The only way to get these down quickly is large PWCs and GFO. I would run Phos-Blast from Premium Aquatics instead of GFO. It is exactly the same as RowaPHOS. The only thing that is better (and not my much) is GFH (granulated ferric hydroxide) which is BRS's "high capacity GFO". Phos-Blast / RowaPHOS is good stuff. I am running the standard BRS GFO.
4) you may end up going through a 'clean-up' stage if you have left your tank at high nutrient conditions for a while. This means that once the scrubber gets cured, and starts to really suck down the nutrients, another mechanism (not 100% clear what it is, but it appears to be chemical + bacterial action) can cause the release of bound waste from the rocks and sand. This means that you might get some algae and/or cyanobacteria outbreaks, but it will pass (how long depends on how dirty your tank is) and your system will be much healthier in the end. I am experiencing cyano outbreaks right now....my tank has been running for 2 years now and this just started happening about 2 months ago...it started when all of my GSP shut down and then began to melt away.
5) For LED lamps like the one you are referring to, I would recommend 12 degree optics Do you mean 120 degree optics?which will allow a wider spread and allow you to put the light closer without burning. Then remove the optics from the blues when you get it so that the blues are very spread out - you don't need much. Verify with the manufacture that this (removing lenses) will not cause the lamp to stop working. I could use the spiral bulbs if that is a better choice.
6) if screen is 120 sq in, then you need 60W of CFL per side for normal light, 120 for high light. I think that when I take the nori into account this will be too small. If I go with the 2 x 100 sq in then I guess the 60w per side would still work...Do they sell a 60 watt CFL bulb?
7) for LEDs, at least for DIY fixtures, 120 sq in of screen would need 15 deep reds per side, or 30 for high light. Or anywhere inbetween. If going by wattage for a stock fixture, shoot for the higher number overall, and multiple lamps if you can. LED floodlights are not as effective on large screens because they group them too close and you do not get even coverage.