Have you had any chance to read up?
Mr. Wilson, did you mean 76 F (not 86)? I assume we are talking water temperature
Woah, I finally caught up on reading this thread over the last two weeks (life is busy and reading time is limited). Greetings from the west coast Peter, this is an impressive and ambitious project and I wish you good luck with it. While I am hardly an expert; having been at this for only a few years; the best advice I can give is to take your time. Especially when stocking the tank as adding livestock and bioload requires time for the biological filtration to catch up. The saying that nothing good in saltwater happens quickly is very true. Although, with a tank your size you could probably add a dozen fish at a time and not notice much of an impact.
One area where I do feel somewhat qualified to comment is in your lighting. I'm not sure how far you may have gone to committing yourself to a system yet. LEDs is definitely a great way to go. I recently built an LED array for my little 75 gallon nano reef tank. It's been running for about 2 months now and so far the corals have all shown noticeable growth and great colouration. I think that LEDs is the up and coming technology and would be great direction to go with your system.
That being said, I would avoid the RGB type LEDs you are looking at. You are wasting energy and output into wavelengths you don't need and probably don't want. They throw lots of lumens but many of those lumens will be wasted in the wavelengths that are not ideal for photosynthesis. What has been shown to work well so far is a mix of cool white LEDs (generally around 6500K colour temperature) and royal blue LEDs. Cree is pretty much the leader in terms of output and efficiency right now. Philips is lagging behind a bit but if you are favouring Phillips emitters due to your relationship with the suppliers I would look at using the Lumiled Rebel LEDs in cool white and royal blue.
I do need to contradict one earlier statement that the blue LEDs are there to provide visual colour adjustment rather than PAR. Testing has shown that the royal blue LEDs actually put out nearly as much PAR as the white LEDs. you have to remember that the mix of chlorophyll respond to light in both the red end of the spectrum and the blue end of the spectrum. So, in theory you could sustain your corals under nothing but blue LEDs but that wouldn't look very good. The two are mixed, and preferably driven independently so the whites and blues can be dimmed independent of each other allowing nice sunrise and sunset effects as well as tuning of colour temperature at the peak of the lighting cycle.
With a tank of your size the up front costs of a suitable LED setup will be high (although it looks like you are fortunate enough not to have to worry about your system cost very much) but the long term benefits are great. You will use far less electricity which is better on your wallet and better for the environment and you will have to deal with less heat added to your system compared to MH or even T5 lighting. Also, you most likely won't need to change LEDs for 5 to 8 years depending on your lighting schedule and how well you manage the LED cooling. With MH or T5 for your sized system you will be changing alot of bulbs every year.
Before you can make some decision about how to setup an LED array you need to decide what your goals are. Do you want enough PAR at the bottom of the tank for high light corals or do you plan to keep them in the top half with lower light corals lower down? The eventual light intensity you want to achieve will dictate the number of LEDs, the type of optics and the spacing of the emitters. I would be happy to help try to figure that out for you when you are ready.
Mr. Wilson, if you are interested in some CAD software for the Mac take a look at TurboCAD. It may not be as powerful as some of the more mainstream commercial packages but it is pretty good and is Mac native.
Peter, nice cars in your neighborhood. I'm not a Bentley fan myself. They just don't move me. Very luxurious but a bit boxy and boring to me. However, that Maserati Gran Turismo is lovely. If I had to have a four door and money were no object my choice would be a Maserati Quatroporte or Aston Martin Rapide. The new Porsche Panamera is a bit funny looking but not so bad once you see it in the flesh and it is one sweet machine to drive. But now I digress so back to aquariums...
Most sps do best at 86F. http://www.ronshimek.com/salinity_temperature.html
Most sps do best at 86F. http://www.ronshimek.com/salinity_temperature.html
Most sps do best at 86F. http://www.ronshimek.com/salinity_temperature.html
Woah, I finally caught up on reading this thread over the last two weeks (life is busy and reading time is limited). Greetings from the west coast Peter, this is an impressive and ambitious project and I wish you good luck with it. While I am hardly an expert; having been at this for only a few years; the best advice I can give is to take your time. Especially when stocking the tank as adding livestock and bioload requires time for the biological filtration to catch up. The saying that nothing good in saltwater happens quickly is very true. Although, with a tank your size you could probably add a dozen fish at a time and not notice much of an impact.
One area where I do feel somewhat qualified to comment is in your lighting. I'm not sure how far you may have gone to committing yourself to a system yet. LEDs is definitely a great way to go. I recently built an LED array for my little 75 gallon nano reef tank. It's been running for about 2 months now and so far the corals have all shown noticeable growth and great colouration. I think that LEDs is the up and coming technology and would be great direction to go with your system.
That being said, I would avoid the RGB type LEDs you are looking at. You are wasting energy and output into wavelengths you don't need and probably don't want. They throw lots of lumens but many of those lumens will be wasted in the wavelengths that are not ideal for photosynthesis. What has been shown to work well so far is a mix of cool white LEDs (generally around 6500K colour temperature) and royal blue LEDs. Cree is pretty much the leader in terms of output and efficiency right now. Philips is lagging behind a bit but if you are favouring Phillips emitters due to your relationship with the suppliers I would look at using the Lumiled Rebel LEDs in cool white and royal blue.
I do need to contradict one earlier statement that the blue LEDs are there to provide visual colour adjustment rather than PAR. Testing has shown that the royal blue LEDs actually put out nearly as much PAR as the white LEDs. you have to remember that the mix of chlorophyll respond to light in both the red end of the spectrum and the blue end of the spectrum. So, in theory you could sustain your corals under nothing but blue LEDs but that wouldn't look very good. The two are mixed, and preferably driven independently so the whites and blues can be dimmed independent of each other allowing nice sunrise and sunset effects as well as tuning of colour temperature at the peak of the lighting cycle.
With a tank of your size the up front costs of a suitable LED setup will be high (although it looks like you are fortunate enough not to have to worry about your system cost very much) but the long term benefits are great. You will use far less electricity which is better on your wallet and better for the environment and you will have to deal with less heat added to your system compared to MH or even T5 lighting. Also, you most likely won't need to change LEDs for 5 to 8 years depending on your lighting schedule and how well you manage the LED cooling. With MH or T5 for your sized system you will be changing alot of bulbs every year.
Before you can make some decision about how to setup an LED array you need to decide what your goals are. Do you want enough PAR at the bottom of the tank for high light corals or do you plan to keep them in the top half with lower light corals lower down? The eventual light intensity you want to achieve will dictate the number of LEDs, the type of optics and the spacing of the emitters. I would be happy to help try to figure that out for you when you are ready.
Mr. Wilson, if you are interested in some CAD software for the Mac take a look at TurboCAD. It may not be as powerful as some of the more mainstream commercial packages but it is pretty good and is Mac native.
Peter, nice cars in your neighborhood. I'm not a Bentley fan myself. They just don't move me. Very luxurious but a bit boxy and boring to me. However, that Maserati Gran Turismo is lovely. If I had to have a four door and money were no object my choice would be a Maserati Quatroporte or Aston Martin Rapide. The new Porsche Panamera is a bit funny looking but not so bad once you see it in the flesh and it is one sweet machine to drive. But now I digress so back to aquariums...
I agree that 86F is waaay too high for a reef aquarium. With Delbeek's book "Reef Aquarium Volume 3", he actually recommends lower temps in the 77-78F degree range to prevent excessive coral spawning which pollutes the tank. I use to keep my SPS dominant tank at about 82F but since I lowered it to 77F or so, my corals have never looked better. At the higher temps, I've also experienced more algae growth and bleaching of corals.
I personally don't know any SPS keepers that keep their tank temps at 86F or so.
Wei
Most sps do best at 86F. http://www.ronshimek.com/salinity_temperature.html
Yes, I had more RTN's above an 82 average and more success keeping SPS in the 76-78 range, 86 seems high to me, don't know of anyone doing this
am I missing something? taken from the referenced article...
The average temperature calculated for all 1000 + coral reefs was 81.7°F. Over all reefs, the average lowest temperature observed was 76.4°F, and the average highest temperature was 86.4°F. One way that these data could be interpreted would be to say that for most corals and coral reef animals, the best conditions would be between 76°F and 86°F, with the average being about 82°F.
I haven't found "excessive coral spawning" to be a problem. If it was, it's the kind of "problem" I want![]()
We aren't keeping corals from the Atlaltic ocean or Caribbean Sea so the average temp isn't accurate for our South Pacific, Australian and Indo Pacific corals. I'll look it up when I get the chance, but I doubt the temps where our corals come from go below 80F.
Maybe some of our Australian friends here can inform us. One of them is in the coral collecting business. I'm sure he can stick anaquarium thermometer on his wetsuit![]()