Its located on a rock near the bottom. Tank is 30" deep. How would one go about finding that sweet spot?
as a LED user, I like to know what the actual PAR is throughout my tank, if not with a PAR meter, at the very least, a PAR mapping from the manufacturer.
High, medium, low placement works pretty good for metal halides and T5s since there is a lot of data on them and there is consistency. But in LEDS, things like watts, number of LEDs etc don't translate the way traditional lighting numbers do.
edit: Change of mind, maybe it is too little light. They close up at night and open up in the morning.
I originally had mine in an area that I would consider too low flow and too little light for a frogspawn, but it still opened, although it stretched out it's tentacles a bit and the color was more translucent than I would expect. I moved it to a better PAR location and medium flow and it appears happier (less stringy and brighter/deeper green).
I have a reefbreeders 48 photon light over my tank, frogspawn is on the bottom is about 2' under the lights which max at 70%,60% on the 2 channels. Its in a low to medium flow area. Too much flow and it closes up.
Also you say your figures are perfect. What are they exactly?
Thanks for that info!! What par value range do you find best for your frogspawn?
Calc 450
DKH 10
mag 1450
Salinity 1.024
Phos 0
Trate 0
Trite0
Ammo 0
Tank is 4 months old.
I am approaching 18 months. At 4 months I was getting similar readings (i just checked my logs) and yet all my LPS and SPS died slow deaths.
From personal experience and from reading a lot of posts, there is a lot of trial and error and as the tank and the reefer matures, things get better. You get to know your tank better and the next thing you know you have an outstanding collection of corals and fish that would be deemed expert only.
Then a mouse chews through a power cord and the whole tank crashes and you put what's left up for sale on craigslist.
PS About 6 months in, cyano started to show up and eventually I concluded that my API NO3 and PO4 tests could not be right. I switched to Red Sea tests and sure enough we had a problem. If the tank is telling you something that contradicts the test kits. get a second opinion.
I am approaching 18 months. At 4 months I was getting similar readings (i just checked my logs) and yet all my LPS and SPS died slow deaths.
From personal experience and from reading a lot of posts, there is a lot of trial and error and as the tank and the reefer matures, things get better. You get to know your tank better and the next thing you know you have an outstanding collection of corals and fish that would be deemed expert only.
Then a mouse chews through a power cord and the whole tank crashes and you put what's left up for sale on craigslist.
PS About 6 months in, cyano started to show up and eventually I concluded that my API NO3 and PO4 tests could not be right. I switched to Red Sea tests and sure enough we had a problem. If the tank is telling you something that contradicts the test kits. get a second opinion.
Your water might be a bit too clean for LPS, they tend to like some nutrients in the water. 4 months old is still very young for the tank so it could be a while until it settles in more and gets more stability as well. If you can post some pics of your coral it could help us see what you having happening as well, including full tank shots so we can see placement.