MammothReefer
Active member
Seems there are 2 topics here. Bulb colour, and ULNS. To me I prefer 20k. I don't care how my corals look in sunlight or 6500k. I don't view my corals in that spectrum so it means nothing to me. The coolest thing about corals imop is how they fluoresce and display vibrant vivid colours under different lighting situations which is based on how the pigmentation reacts to said spectrum. Sometimes I like to view my corals under pure actinics and watch the greens or reds just POP, or even a black light for more fun! I feel a lot of the issues people have with Zeo tanks isn't the result of Zeo. It's an issue with colour combinations of T5 bulbs that tends to trend with Zeo users.
My colours can use some work but overall I'm happy for non-carbon dosed tank. I don't know if I'm "ULNS". I would say proboly not but I'm not a heavy feeder. I stopped testing nitrates and phosphates as they were always running @ 0 but I see algae and even the occasional cyano break outs now and then.
I'd go into the whole photo discussion but it's nothing new. There are ways to make corals pop and it's not fake, and there are ways to fake colour and make it look real. Top down view will always display better coluration then threw the glass. However so much of it just has to do with coral selection and arrangement.
FTS colours look "OK" but that's pretty much how it looks minus the black clipping in the shadows.
Top down shot (cropped for bulb reflection). Colours just pop..and that's how it looks when you look down except in real life we don't clip highlights like our camera.
Could I improve the colours by going back to carbon dosing and then feeding more.. Yah proboly. Is it worth the extra layer of complexity. I'm not sure. What do you guys think?
Do my corals look starved since I feed less and WC more or is that something reserved for Carbon users?
My colours can use some work but overall I'm happy for non-carbon dosed tank. I don't know if I'm "ULNS". I would say proboly not but I'm not a heavy feeder. I stopped testing nitrates and phosphates as they were always running @ 0 but I see algae and even the occasional cyano break outs now and then.
I'd go into the whole photo discussion but it's nothing new. There are ways to make corals pop and it's not fake, and there are ways to fake colour and make it look real. Top down view will always display better coluration then threw the glass. However so much of it just has to do with coral selection and arrangement.
FTS colours look "OK" but that's pretty much how it looks minus the black clipping in the shadows.

Top down shot (cropped for bulb reflection). Colours just pop..and that's how it looks when you look down except in real life we don't clip highlights like our camera.

Could I improve the colours by going back to carbon dosing and then feeding more.. Yah proboly. Is it worth the extra layer of complexity. I'm not sure. What do you guys think?
Do my corals look starved since I feed less and WC more or is that something reserved for Carbon users?
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