Rod's food por vida. Try the original blend. No need to drain or soak; its got every goody you'll want.
+1 - my fish and coral love this stuff
Rod's food por vida. Try the original blend. No need to drain or soak; its got every goody you'll want.
your 150 is the 4 foot long and 30 high if I'm not mistaken.
The Anthias, damsels and goby I wouldn't consider enough bioload to really make a dent on the ATB skimmer
I have to say that with the equipment you're running and the bioload you currently have the ROX carbon alone would be enough to strip the water column of nutrients. Boomer has documented in the chemistry forum how well carbon works....even when compared to protein skimming. ROX is great stuff...but very strong and able to pull a lot of organics out of the water. I would slow down the flow through the reactor and wouldn't change the gfo and carbon as frequently. ROX in your tank can definitely last a month. The GFO could probably last 3 months. You appear to be over filtering your tank. Pick your favorite fish retailer and get yourself a tang. It appears that your 150 is the 4 foot long and 30 high if I'm not mistaken. I get away with a lttle higher bioload because of my 6 feet footprint. This is probably why my tangs never fight.
I would stick with one of the easier tangs in the Zebrasoma family. Maybe a yellow tang or a really nice purple tang if the budget allows. The Anthias, damsels and goby I wouldn't consider enough bioload to really make a dent on the ATB skimmer....especially with all the ROX and GFO you're running.
Congratulations..you get to buy more fish and feed more. What a blessing.
Rod's food por vida. Try the original blend. No need to drain or soak; its got every goody you'll want.
Good luck and keep us posted. Welcome to the game!
Also, Keith has stated that he likes to run his tank a little "dirty" because it helps out with his colors. You'll find there's more room for error than you think. Feed it heavy, skim it heavy and keep up on your maintenance.
I agree that I like my SPS to have good PE, and I worry when they don't, but from what I have read, PE is not a known indicator of SPS health. I used to have a coral-nipping clown goby in my tank and daytime PE was non-existant. Since I removed the goby (several months ago) my SPS PE has been good. Except that I like the way the SPS looks with good PE, I really haven't noticed any sig change in coloration or growth.
I have never owned any of the fish you have in your tank, are any of them known to nip at coral polyps?
What's your alkalinity?
Flow also has a lot to do with it.
I assume you don't have a lot of flow at the sand bed or it would be blowing all around. You could try moving it higher to see if it will respond better.