You have to review your setup...skimmer, fishes, food etc
im rly not running any kind of media. Is there something I should be running?
I just got a hanna tester meter and the phosphates say .25 is that bad for a SPS tank or it ok? Im looking into getting a reactor for BRS and put there GFO in the first reactor and then carbon in the second chamber. IS this a good idea? Any tips? Thanks!![]()
My tank looks horriable right now....Lots of algea. Thats why Im looking for the best way to get rid of these phosphates. I did it all correctly and it said .25 last week it was at .16 but tomorrow is water change day.
Three teaspoons of Oyster Feast every other night is a perfect recipe to escalate phosphate levels. You have more than enough fish eating and pooping in this tank. Leave the coral foods to the frag farmers who don't have fish. Oyster Feast created more problems for my sps tank than it's worth. You'll do fine without it. I know someone will quote Eric Borneman's article on SPS needing to feed but the reality of it is that our fish are enough food producers in an SPS tank.
Clean water, stable parameters, healthy stocking and feeding of fishes coupled with a solid maintenance routine is all you need. The rest just sucks more money out of your wallet IMO.
How new is your tank? Whats your nitrates at? I see you say your using RO/DI with 0 TDS. is this YOUR tds or are you taking the fish stores word? How much are you feeding / how often / what are you feeding with?
What kind of skimmer / filtration.
Pics of tank / sump would help us out
Three teaspoons of Oyster Feast every other night is a perfect recipe to escalate phosphate levels. You have more than enough fish eating and pooping in this tank. Leave the coral foods to the frag farmers who don't have fish. Oyster Feast created more problems for my sps tank than it's worth. You'll do fine without it. I know someone will quote Eric Borneman's article on SPS needing to feed but the reality of it is that our fish are enough food producers in an SPS tank.
Clean water, stable parameters, healthy stocking and feeding of fishes coupled with a solid maintenance routine is all you need. The rest just sucks more money out of your wallet IMO.