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Old 07-31-2011, 04:05 PM
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If all your leather and soft doing extremly well I would check the parameter of your water quality, nitrates, nitrite, phosphates and you haven't mentioned anything about activated carbon,GFO or addition of calcium, you are running 2 pink bulbs unless i miss read it let me ask for what reason.
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Old 07-31-2011, 05:38 PM
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That doesn't seem like very much light to me and I'm having a difficult time understanding how much flow you have in your tank. For many stoney coral you're going to want at least 30x your display tanks volume in flow per hour or 5400 gph however many people use even more than that. Alkalinity and magnesium levels are also very important so you should probably be checking them as well. Ideally you want alkalinity between 7-12 dkh and magnesium between 1200-1500 ppm.
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Old 07-31-2011, 06:33 PM
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Ok what would you suggest for lighting. I was thinking about the metal hallide T5 combination. Alkalinity is around 10dkh.. I have never check for magnesium levels...will do so. When you talk about "volume flow per hour" are you refering to what the pump in the sump is doing. If so I know it is producing at a high volume. When I bought the pump it was recommended for the size of the tank , actually bought a unit that was above the recommended pump size.currently have water fans set up on my wave maker. should I change to water pumps to help increase water flow.
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Old 07-31-2011, 07:03 PM
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Your tank contains 180 US gallons of water. Multiply that by 30 and you get 5400 gallons. To keep high flow demanding stoney coral you want all of the flow that your various pumps and power-heads create to add up to at least 5400 gallons per hour. This is just a rule of thumb but I wouldn't want to be much lower. However you can certainly have more flow than that. Some people have as much as 60x in gph. In your case that would equal 10800gph.

I don't have much experience with T5 so I can't really comment. Do you know what colour temperature yours are? When was the last time you changed out your bulbs for new ones?
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Old 07-31-2011, 07:39 PM
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The T5 are a high intensity florescent bulb that operate at a low temp. have six bulbs that are at different light spectrums, 2 white 2 atinic blue, 2 coral wave(pink) that are supposed to promote growth. Going to increase water flow with bigger fans and pumps see what happens. May go to combination metal hallide and florescent T5 set up
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Old 07-31-2011, 08:25 PM
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Color temperature for reef aquarium bulbs is expressed on the kelvin scale. 10000k, 14000k and 20000k are typical bulb colour temperatures marketed by manufacturers. Actinic bulbs and others that don't produce colour temperatures within that range may look nice to us but don't produce very much useful light (if any) for coral. Its also important to change your bulbs at least once a year if not more often as their colour spectrum will shift and their intensity will decline over time.

But as elias pointed out, If you have a problem with your water quality specifically nitrite, nitrate or phosphate it won't matter how good your lighting, water flow and other water chemistry parameters are. So you may want to find those out first.
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Old 07-31-2011, 06:37 PM
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I am using activated reef carbon in pouches in my sump. Pink bulds are 54w T5 action wave bulbs, supposed to help with coral growth
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