keithinspokane
Well-known member
- Joined
- Mar 21, 2007
- Messages
- 58
just some observations of mine for others new to the hobby,hopefully it could be some help to someone sometime.this is about water flow.i recently added a maxijet mod 1200 to my 75 gallon and have been trying to figure out the flow situation.since it pretty much overpowers both the other powerheads and return line put together,it has been kinda tricky.
so...ive been moving the modded powerhead from here to there and back,a few times.and since im fairly new to keeping sps(corals in general),i didnt really know how much flow the sps could handle at worse,which i found to be quite a bit.BUT the observation i made was on a montepora,and an unknown acro.though the corals do like a lot of flow,they wont put up with turbulant flow for long.what was happening was,since the modded 1200 does overpower all the others,the tank naturally gets more flow coming from one side of the tank than the other,where there was counter flow occuring,it was creating a whirlwind/funnel affect with the water,causing mild tissue recession within 3-5 days with the acro,and i think it was like 1-2 days with the monti.i tried changing the powerhead setup once again with no luck.so it was time to move the frags to other parts of the tank.so far they seem to be recovering well,but time will tell.
so i guess my advice/point is,that if you get tissue recession from unknown causes(if your water parameters test within range,no nipping fish ect),maybe check the flow pattern in the tank.this little thread will problably suite people with smaller/shorter tanks,as with deeper tanks,high rate of flow seems easier to get high rate of flow without pounding every corner of the tank,as in my case,i have a 75 gallon with 47x turnover rate per hour,theres not too many low flow areas in the tank.which ive seen in larger tanks,its possible to get high flow rates but still have low flow parts of the tank for softies and such.thanks for reading,hope this helps somebody other than me
so...ive been moving the modded powerhead from here to there and back,a few times.and since im fairly new to keeping sps(corals in general),i didnt really know how much flow the sps could handle at worse,which i found to be quite a bit.BUT the observation i made was on a montepora,and an unknown acro.though the corals do like a lot of flow,they wont put up with turbulant flow for long.what was happening was,since the modded 1200 does overpower all the others,the tank naturally gets more flow coming from one side of the tank than the other,where there was counter flow occuring,it was creating a whirlwind/funnel affect with the water,causing mild tissue recession within 3-5 days with the acro,and i think it was like 1-2 days with the monti.i tried changing the powerhead setup once again with no luck.so it was time to move the frags to other parts of the tank.so far they seem to be recovering well,but time will tell.
so i guess my advice/point is,that if you get tissue recession from unknown causes(if your water parameters test within range,no nipping fish ect),maybe check the flow pattern in the tank.this little thread will problably suite people with smaller/shorter tanks,as with deeper tanks,high rate of flow seems easier to get high rate of flow without pounding every corner of the tank,as in my case,i have a 75 gallon with 47x turnover rate per hour,theres not too many low flow areas in the tank.which ive seen in larger tanks,its possible to get high flow rates but still have low flow parts of the tank for softies and such.thanks for reading,hope this helps somebody other than me