Where did you get the Tech M? Aquarium Center in Clementon perhaps?
You have some top SPS corals there and it is a shame that they are not showing thier best colours. Seeing those pics makes it pretty apparent that something is not right in the tank...
Are you a member of a local reef club? - Reason I am asking is that perhaps you can get an experiance reefkeeper to come over and have a look at your setup...someone who has an established SPS tank with colourful SPS may just pick up something about your tank? - Not that I am bashing your husbandry skills or reefkeeping knowledge, but it may be something that another person can pinpoint?
When did you last take nitrate and phosphate readings? What were the readings and what did you use to measure?
It runs 0.03-0.05 depending on the the test.PO4 is pretty high even if it is on the low side .05 is a problem and .3 is bad for sps.
Yes, but it gets exhausted within a couple days. I think my rock must still be leaching small amounts of PO4Are you running any GFO? If not do so.
Was running zeovit but stopped that over a month ago. Haven't carbon dosed since.You where carbon and bacteria dosing right?
I think I'd rather have brown corals then pale....lolCorals look a bit pale but they do have colors coming out, mine all completely browned out on me.
My RO/DI has TDS and zero PO4. I haven't tested the water freshly mixed with salt, but I'm switching over to ESV salt this weekCheck out your RODI water for PO4 then test your new mixed salt water just be make sure it is not coming from there. I have read several threads where salt mix contained PO4.
Yeah I stopped like 5 weeks agoI will need to reread your thread to answer some of my question about your reef.
Ok just read through it again. Stop the Zoevit completely if you have not. I personally dont like carbon dosing. It is to easy to starve your corals.
Water changes and GFO work great and are simple. Start to feed a coral food like Reef Roids or Oyster Feast.
I wouldn't put GFO online right now. The PO4 is really not high enough to cause a problem just yet. Don't shoot for zero. Your sps will be goners unless you're on Zeovit with all the additives. IMHO, .03 to .05 on the Hannah Meter is a fine target. Unless you start seeing recession from the base I wouldn't finger phosphate as your culprit here. Those corals to me just look like new kids on the block that need some time to adjust. I had a purple nana that was perfect the first few days and then it went brown for 4 months with no growth. I changed absolutely nothing. I didn't touch it, change flow, lighting or maintenance schedule. Shortly after the 4 month brown out I started to see some nice purple tips that took another 4 months to color up all the way to the base of the frag. Since then, it has started to grow and has beautiful green polyps. My secret? Time to acclimate without changing things!
Personally, I think you're doing absolutely nothing wrong. This stuff takes time, and your SPS need time to adjust. The only thing I can possibly think of (If I must) off the top of my head is stray voltage. A few years back I had a heater's connection to the waterproofed wire go bad. I struggled for over a month to find out why my SPS were losing color and not looking all that great. Then one day I reached into the sump and my lip touched the rim of the Rubbermaid container that holds my skimmer. I got a small tingle and started running through the courses of what it could be. Process of elimination revealed the heater problem. I actually used my lips on the rim of the Rubbermaid container to see if each unplugged component was the cause.:lolspin: Within a few days polyp extension was improved and coloration took a little more time...maybe close to 6 weeks if I recall.
As for new additions though, I don't sweat it anymore when it looks like they've lost some color or aren't extending their polyps. Truth be told, I don't think mother nature designed our beautiful and colorful sticks to be broken into pieces, glued to plastic, shipped overnight in a bag and thrown in an entirely unnatural setting...even if it looks natural to us.
Give it time...please. You'll be rewarded for staying the course and not doing anything drastic while your tank matures. I know what it feels like. I rushed to judgement before and started changing things when all I should have done was sit back and let things work themselves out. I paid the price for those judgement calls and vowed to step back and take a deep breath next time.
Remember the old adage.....
"Reef tanks are like race cars.....the faster you push them the harder they crash."
I wouldn't put GFO online right now. The PO4 is really not high enough to cause a problem just yet. Don't shoot for zero. Your sps will be goners unless you're on Zeovit with all the additives. IMHO, .03 to .05 on the Hannah Meter is a fine target. Unless you start seeing recession from the base I wouldn't finger phosphate as your culprit here. Those corals to me just look like new kids on the block that need some time to adjust. I had a purple nana that was perfect the first few days and then it went brown for 4 months with no growth. I changed absolutely nothing. I didn't touch it, change flow, lighting or maintenance schedule. Shortly after the 4 month brown out I started to see some nice purple tips that took another 4 months to color up all the way to the base of the frag. Since then, it has started to grow and has beautiful green polyps. My secret? Time to acclimate without changing things!
Personally, I think you're doing absolutely nothing wrong. This stuff takes time, and your SPS need time to adjust. The only thing I can possibly think of (If I must) off the top of my head is stray voltage. A few years back I had a heater's connection to the waterproofed wire go bad. I struggled for over a month to find out why my SPS were losing color and not looking all that great. Then one day I reached into the sump and my lip touched the rim of the Rubbermaid container that holds my skimmer. I got a small tingle and started running through the courses of what it could be. Process of elimination revealed the heater problem. I actually used my lips on the rim of the Rubbermaid container to see if each unplugged component was the cause.:lolspin: Within a few days polyp extension was improved and coloration took a little more time...maybe close to 6 weeks if I recall.
As for new additions though, I don't sweat it anymore when it looks like they've lost some color or aren't extending their polyps. Truth be told, I don't think mother nature designed our beautiful and colorful sticks to be broken into pieces, glued to plastic, shipped overnight in a bag and thrown in an entirely unnatural setting...even if it looks natural to us.
Give it time...please. You'll be rewarded for staying the course and not doing anything drastic while your tank matures. I know what it feels like. I rushed to judgement before and started changing things when all I should have done was sit back and let things work themselves out. I paid the price for those judgement calls and vowed to step back and take a deep breath next time.
Remember the old adage.....
"Reef tanks are like race cars.....the faster you push them the harder they crash."
What is your fish load like? I had very very slow and slightly dull colors in my new nano while I searched for the right coral beauty, added that and color came back and rowth started...in the 3 weeks since I added the pair of onyx clowns, growth has been insane, PE is amazing, and coloration is as well I have a blue tipped acro that apparantly has green polyps(the owner of the mother colony didn't even know that lol)nothing has changed with the water, only now doing 4 gallon change in this tank bi weekly instead of 2 gallons. Keep dosing the GFO to keep the phosphate in check and maybe add a fish or two.