Auto dim is for you not the tank's health.
I don't know about that light but it seems just like all the other value fixtures out there.. It's all about getting a good layout of leds to grow coral and good after sale service if anything goes wrong.. That's why most people will go with reefbreeders or similar for basically the same light.. It's all about customer service and accountability with cheaper lights.
I thought the "dim" feature was for the tank so the fish dont have a sudden burst of light.
I have fish that are 13 years old that have a sudden burst of light every day.. It's a gimmick and a way to closer replicate nature.. It's no needed at all.. Leds are new reef tanks aren't, leds are the only things that ramp up (except the new Dimmable t5)
True Thanks for your help
Well said that's literally the best advice in this whole thread.Also, you may want to carefully consider whether you've the budget for a reef tank at all. Keep in mind that even small coral frags are going to run you $30-50, and colonies of interesting corals like Euphyllia are going to cost in the $100 and up range. Even a quite sparsely populated reef of the size you're planning is going to have around $2000 worth of animals.
And, it would be a critical mistake to budget $2k for the animals and not purchase the required RODI system, test kits, refractometer, algae magnet, skimmer, return pumps, tank powerheads, quarantine tank (that's a requirement, by the way, not an option) and other accoutrements. Buying the animals and not buying the minimally necessary extras means a high probability of losing those animals.
It's not that one has to have the latest and greatest stuff to keep a reef, and there's at least a multiplication factor of 5 between doing things inexpensively and with the latest equipment. But - there's definitely a floor below which you're going to have a hard time, and possibly lose interest in the hobby as a result. I can't tell you exactly where that flow is in terms of dollar figures, because it depends on whether you're willing to purchase used equipment, and how good a deal you get on that equipment.
If you've kept freshwater tanks, I would tell you from long experience that a reef tank is approximately 10 - 20 times as expensive as a well-stocked planted community tank. If you've not kept a freshwater tank, almost any experienced member here will tell you to do that first, or at least consider a marine fish-only tank to start with.
Thanks. There is a local shop near me that sells mixed water all ready to do. All you do is pump it in to buckets. And its cheap. I can get 150 gallons for 50 bucks.
The power heads I was looking at were these... are they good?
http://www.ebay.com/itm/220582739625?_trksid=p2060778.m1438.l2649&ssPageName=STRK:MEBIDX:IT
Look into it now. It's not expensive to do, and might save you hundreds of dollars of fish. It will also slow you down, which will make it easier on the budget to afford stuff.And as for the QR tanks. Thats new to me. I will have to do more research on this..
Again, IM totally new at this. I plan on taking it slow. I came on here to get answers because I am new to this and have no idea how to get a salt water tank going 100%
that light might be good for zoaz (low light coral) try this
http://www.ebay.com/itm/Evergrow-Di...092?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item4d0b33cd6c