trueblackpercula
New member
Haven't forgotten you waiting on some camera equipment. I will also answer your questions as they are valid ones.
Okay so tell me mate, is that Oregon tort as stunningly deep blue as i think it is? is it hard to get the true tort and how do you know if it's the true one. Not questioning it is true i just don't really know how all this naming works as i thought there would only be one Oregon tort.
You have to get a better shot for us of that blueberry nasuta as i know it looks way better than that shot you took.
Do you run two of those Radion units over your display and if you've used halides or T5's before what do you think about the LED's as far as coral colors and overall health.
Things look good to me so why is it that so many reefers seem to have dramas whilst far fewer are getting good results. Sorry for grilling you but i'd like to hear what you think about the LED 'thing'. Keep the pics coming Perc![]()
anytime hope what I gave you is what you neededHey mate, sorry for not getting back to you. I appreciate you taking the time to answer my queries so thoroughly![]()
It came in the other day and it reads zero so i tested my tap water and the reading was 47 lol[/QUOTE]The TDS meter is a good move, something so simple can save a lot of headaches with water quality.
the cat litter scooper worked very well. I removed as much algae as i could but as you can see from the picture below its back againRemoving the algae from the sand is a good idea, i did the same as it was like a hairy lawn in places - looked disgusting. That cat litter scoop idea is great, i ended up removing the 1" bed completely for a couple of months to speed up the water cleansing.
that sounds like some i will do and see if this helps and let you know.I had 4 cups from diff friends tank to kick start my DSB.
yes the vodka dosing is going well the only two draw backs are i have to manually dose it and i seem to be drinking a lot more theses daysI've never tried getting the corals drunk so i can't comment on carbon dosing at all mate. I say if you feel it is contributing in a positive way then continue.
The corals are looking great, good PE during lights on is always a great sign. :thumbsup: I love the way you took that last shot looking across the acro field, looks cool and will look bloody awesome when those guys grow upHow are things coming along overall, i hope you've made some headway into getting things back in order.
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Hey there, been following along this thread as well. Wow, sorry to see the outbreak of algae! I agree with the others and would stop feeding heavily until you get things back under control. How is your skimmer performing? How often do you need to empty the skimmer cup? I am not familiar with vodka dosing, but are you able to run any GFO? Are you growing any chaeto algae in your sump? Seems like you need more nutrient exporting.
Just a thought, do you think your LR could be leaching out phosphates? But then again I believe you said this tank was setup for 6 years so that might not be the case. Try more nutrient exporting and maybe cut back your light schedule until things are back under control.
Thanks everyone for all the great advice. I was able to clean the algae once again from the sand be and hope that this will do the trick. I have also stopped dosing oyster feast at the rate that I was and have cut it down to 2mls once a week and its target feed to the sps. I feel if I don't feed them they will start to STN from the bottom up. I have Also lowed the I tension of my LEDs and its only been since August 15th and I am seeing some major improvement in color. So if you have a LEDs fixture start off low and ramp it up a little each week.
I will take some pictures I hope this weekend and show the results.
How are things progressing now mate, is the algae backing off at all yet. Have you thought about stopping the oyster feast altogether and trying some roids or other dry coral food. Just throwing out some ideas in case backing off the oyster feeds still doesn't stop the algae outbreak.
Everything is looking pretty pale if your pic is near to what you're seeing in real life. I think light stress might be a big part of the problem together with whatever is causing the algae to go crazy. Those LED's are a lot brighter than our eyes register so starting low is good advice indeed. I'm glad you're seeing positive results from the lower LED intensity, once you get the water under control again i know everything will start to pop :thumbsup: