I say it is easier than soluble carbon from the standpoint that most reefers do not have the years of experience that you and I have. Thus, they are prone to overdosing, or maybe adding other elements into the equation. (check above)....and their daily routine may or may not happen. Pellets still work even if you don't dose.
In addition, I feel the pellets equalize to the feeding regimen of the tank much easier. The carbon needs some adjustment if there are changes in the feeding or in the load of the tank. The pellets colonize the bacteria and thus balance the equation out with either more or less on their own. No user input needed. Feeding is probably the most overlooked, skewed answer you will get from people. Try doing a tank maintenance service.... Yet feeding is the leading reason were talking about nitrate reduction anyway. So something that keeps up with the fluctuations of the average reefer feeding their tank is a plus in my book. BTW: I also preach to feed the same amount each day, or collectively each week. Keeping the food input at a constant value will also stabilize the bacteria population and cyano will not be an issue. ( I bet you knew that! )
Dosing soluble carbon does not ensure you will not have cyano. It is always present in any system and thus competes. There are other issues that can lead to it patching up. Water flow, feeding, and light come to mind. Not to mention skimmer, or any questions as to size, efficiency, location. Too many variables.
I do agree that some small particles do sheer off the pellets and free float. But that's no difference than carbon 'free floating' feeding the bacteria present in the system. I designed a 'Bio Track' several years ago when the pellets came out and it works very well. No pump needed and the pellets 'churn'. I haven't had any mush, missing pellets, etc. So I feel confident they physically last.
As far as bacteria dosing...... My opinion is that you can play a major role in the 'natural selection' process by dosing beneficial bacteria strains known to do the job. In addition, you will find some products include enzymes that help continue the natural process that are not necessarily in abundance as needed in a closed loop system. Carbon dosing included, you will benefit. I prefer drops per day as I'm a seasoned reefer (and have a daily routine), but the average joe may consider once a week additions for ease. Bottom line, this is the first step in 'managing the bacteria'. I think of it as similar to using RO/DI water. Its a base point you can skew your way.
If you are having success not dosing, I would hang that in the experience department and the fact that you probably have a stable tank. Thats why your paid the big bucks!!
On the bleached coral topic..........don't get me started....... Lighting is probably one of the biggest players... Bleaching in reference to the pellets is nonsense. Some corals may adjust differently as the nitrates and phosphates drop. And there maybe more or less adjustment depending on the start of the nitrates and the length of time the coral considered that level its home. This holds true to initial carbon dosing too.
Further, with the lower nutrient system, as you know, the corals lighten up some. And some systems water clarity will increase and thus PAR levels increase and the coral adjusts with lighter color...so add the lighter color (Lns), the increase in light, and the adjustment parameters...and walla, you got some bleached corals. Its a sum of many factors. To label 'Pellets' as the sole reason is ignorance to the whole picture. And if you apply the 'Patience is a Virtue' rule, I'll bet that the corals adjust and over time recondition to the new environment. Just like the frag you mail ordered and it turned brown for a few weeks. Do you panic? No....you know it will turn exactly as pictured on the site!!
As far as overdosing, no way. Not anymore than someone dumping a few random shots of vodka into a 90 gallon tank. Bottom line, it is a matter of food and equalization with the amount of bacteria present. There will always be a limiting factor. Whether its nitrate or carbon, phosphate, or even the bacteria themselves.
By the way, I have used about 2000ml of pellets in my 220 tank for several years and have never had the corals bleach. I would consider that quite a bit. I do feed 4-5 cubes of PE a day for my fish, Rotifers and Cyclo twice a week at night. Only when I switched to LED lights did I bleach anything. I'm working on a 6 month study on the LED Lights, their PAR values, Color Spectrum, and Bleaching. The LED lights are extremely powerful and over illumination is very easy. If you tune to your eyes and not a PAR reading that is adjusted for the narrow spectrum, you WILL BLEACH PERIOD.
Its tough sometimes to sort through what you read. I have been at a ton of local peeps tanks and you would be really surprised at the lack of understanding of what the 'goal' in water changes, testing, and for that matter dosing vodka or even pellets. So in the end its easier because:
1) it is something that the average reefer can easily initiate into their filters or sumps....
2) general dosing of beneficial bacterial is not exactly necessary, but helpful....(that's for any tank).
3) you will help way more people than crossing your fingers and hoping they dose right, or for that matter daily.
4) I personally feel bad if someone through misunderstanding hurts their tank. Simpler is way better.
My bet is that your tank is very stable like mine. Double your food input, or better yet triple it. I bet you will get some cyano as the tank re-stabilizes to the new input. I also bet you will have to increase the soluble carbon in a similar ratio. But its not the end of the world if a small patch sprouts up then. It should be expected. But it should also be expected to clear up as the tank stabilizes. And there are things that can speed the process up like bacteria dosing and using a flocculator. Like I said earlier, it is basic Bacteria Management.
Here is a current shot of my tank. Blue LED lights make the picture colors look off (cell phone camera). Almost all the corals are either small frags or small colonies from being re-built about 6 months ago (blue snowflake polyp). Hammer is 7 years old. All Leathers are at least 5 years old and cut regularly. Acro all started from frags years ago. Many are third generation from colonies I broke out twice over. Last Green Stylo I took to the LFS wouldn't fit into a 5 gallon pail. Also couldn't get 6 blue chromis out of it either!! Duncan is 100+ heads and growing quicker by the month. Bought 1 head in 2006 or 7 from Liveaquaria. Same for Orange Ricordia. At least 8 -10 chalice. No cyano for the past 3 months as the tank ages again. Sand bed and sump left alone, so its back up fairly quick. Felt I should at least show what I have....total mixed tank!! I can't remember the last coral I lost. Has to be at least 5-6 years plus. Mainly keeping the colonies to a manageable size and finding outlets for the tons of frags is the real work.
Custom Sump w/Bio Track that goes down the back. First drop is a Cheato tumbler, second chamber is the Bio-Pellets, third chamber is designed to catch any overflowing pellets, and then it ends close to where the skimmer picks up. Pellet chamber has a triangle sponge cut to the bottom, so the pellets tumble individually, but 'churn' as a whole. Pellets from the bottom are tossed up to the back of the pile and then down again. No need to manually stir them, but very easy to get to them if you want to. Flow through the 'Track' is controlled by the weir (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weir ) on the main wall. In the pic it is slightly tilted up to allow enough water through both sections of the sump. This pic is from 11/2011 and it is in the same position today. System has 2 pumps running everything at 115watts total. (1- bubble blaster 5K (55w), 1-water blaster 5k (60w)). Cheato is cut in half every other month. Calcium Reactor is gravity fed through a 'Tube Loop' I created. GFC is powered through the main pump. I have a 50 gallon frag tank on the back wall that is also plumbed in as well..... all on 115 watts!
It can't be any easier.....a few basic supps, a few drops of bacteria or cap a week.....and everything else falls into place. I have a routine, but even if I was to miss a few days, all stays the same.
