I've been keeping reef tanks for eight years and just found this site recently. It's great! But some of the information is making me doubt my reef tank husbandry!
For example, the consensus recommendation for a good rate of water flow in a reef aquarium seems to be 10 or even 20 times or more the volume of the tank per hour.
I recently moved to a new flat (apartment) and got a new tank built. It's been up for about two months now. The display tank is about 500 L (130 gallons) and the sump is about 180 L (50 gallons). After I got two new Eheim 1262 pumps to use on the returns from the sump (to replace two lower-volume pumps), I removed the powerheads (Tunze wave simulators) from inside the display because they were ugly and I thought that, with the new pumps, the water coming from nozzles near the top of the water column was creating quite a lot of nice chaotic flow, with some fast current areas and some slow flow areas. To give you an idea, in the fast areas a medium-sized yellow tang (Zebrasoma flavescens) has to work to work to swim against the water and finds it difficult to hover in place but can still do so. Everyone seems happy -- SPS polyps are extended and they're growing, chemistry has been fine. In fact, no problems with the new tank at all so far.
Well, after all this web site browsing, today out of curiosity I measured the flow (which now comes only from the returns from the sump), and it came to only around 2000 L (500 gallons) per hour, or about four times the volume of the display tank, due to head pressure from the piping.
I know that guidelines for things like flow rate are just rules of thumb, and obviously I will go by the condition and behavior of the livestock, but is there any compelling reason I should I put the powerheads back in? Would more flow make things even better for SPS? Will I find that dead spots will one day make diatoms bloom like hideous brown fireworks overnight? Or is there a conspiracy among aquarium equipment manufacturers to get reefers to buy (even) more equipment!?
Any advice would be greatly appreciated!
For example, the consensus recommendation for a good rate of water flow in a reef aquarium seems to be 10 or even 20 times or more the volume of the tank per hour.
I recently moved to a new flat (apartment) and got a new tank built. It's been up for about two months now. The display tank is about 500 L (130 gallons) and the sump is about 180 L (50 gallons). After I got two new Eheim 1262 pumps to use on the returns from the sump (to replace two lower-volume pumps), I removed the powerheads (Tunze wave simulators) from inside the display because they were ugly and I thought that, with the new pumps, the water coming from nozzles near the top of the water column was creating quite a lot of nice chaotic flow, with some fast current areas and some slow flow areas. To give you an idea, in the fast areas a medium-sized yellow tang (Zebrasoma flavescens) has to work to work to swim against the water and finds it difficult to hover in place but can still do so. Everyone seems happy -- SPS polyps are extended and they're growing, chemistry has been fine. In fact, no problems with the new tank at all so far.
Well, after all this web site browsing, today out of curiosity I measured the flow (which now comes only from the returns from the sump), and it came to only around 2000 L (500 gallons) per hour, or about four times the volume of the display tank, due to head pressure from the piping.
I know that guidelines for things like flow rate are just rules of thumb, and obviously I will go by the condition and behavior of the livestock, but is there any compelling reason I should I put the powerheads back in? Would more flow make things even better for SPS? Will I find that dead spots will one day make diatoms bloom like hideous brown fireworks overnight? Or is there a conspiracy among aquarium equipment manufacturers to get reefers to buy (even) more equipment!?
Any advice would be greatly appreciated!