This is a video of my FOWLRFC Tank (fish only with live rock and faux coral):
I was able to use various ways to keep nitrate and phosphate down with refugium, sugar addition, reactor and high flow. As a result algae on artificial coral are kept at very low level.
The tank never had water change since setup almost two years ago, and the artificial coral were never removed for cleaning.
For those of you who don't have the resources to do a real reef, yet want to have the closest reef tank experience, there is hope.
And many efforts were made to keep the tank super quiet if you noticed.
My 20 gallon setup, getting the new acrylic tank in a week so i can finally run a sump instead of this hang on filter (which has been doing a good job for about a year now)
Has anyone used Hi-8? I have an old one lying around and don't know what to use it for. I mean, the 70s are gone & that's when it was really last used --- seems to be another "momento" mom insisted I must take home with me. Ha!
I am really into taking pictures and videos of my reef, however, my equipment stinks. My Olympus -510 has 15 second video burst, but trying to shoot the tank results in a video too dark to see. I have a kiddy camera, that can do streaming video, but is very pixelated, and can't zoom in on the critters.
So any tips on good, but cheap video equipment? Or tips for making what I have work better?
Here's my first attempt at posting a video. This was taken with a 7.1 mp point and shoot Oympus Stylus 770 digital camera at a 15 fps rate. Not very high-tech as far as video cameras go, but good enough for my purposes...here we go:
Here's my first attempt at posting a video. This was taken with a 7.1 mp point and shoot Oympus Stylus 770 digital camera at a 15 fps rate. Not very high-tech as far as video cameras go, but good enough for my purposes...here we go:
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