I always have a lot of questions...seems as the years go by the number of questions I have grows.
So, we have a 180G tank and we are moving towards a mainly SPS tank and I was curious what kind of general things should one keep in mind when going SPS?
To date we seem to be doing well (knock on wood), as noted in another thread we are able to maintain good numbers on our tank (Alk in low 8's, Nitrates > 10ppm (need a more accurate test kit), calcium between 380 and 400, Phosphates seem to be at 0, Ph between 8.2 and 8.4) but I want to know what I should plan for in the long term (was asking about Ca reators in chem. section...seems I'll need one at some point).
What about everything else? We are running MH, 2 x 400W (moving to Reeflux 12K but may want to go to 10K on those) and I have read that lower K ratings seem to help create more/faster growth. It seems that the various K ratings eventually are to suit ones taste but is there anything MH related that we should drive to? Are VHO's necessary? We have 4 x 110 Actinic today.
Flow is good in the tank, 2 x Dolphin 1200's and 2 x Dolphin 3xx's that come into the top and the bottom of the tank respectively. I thought about getting some MJ mods and placing them in the tank to add a more "complex" flow as I have heard that SPS prefer this complex flow. Is this something I should be developing?
Food...what about food. This is probably the most complex thing, or at least I am having a hard time completely comprehending this one (though yesterday's lesson from Tim at Barrier Reef made the most sense). Is target feeding necessary? As I understood it yesterday there are two concepts...first is making a solid food chain in the water column where you can add food supplements that create a solid cycle from the smallest to the largest "things" that your reef will feed on.
Second is the concept of "target" feeding...as I understand not necessarily squirting food directly onto the coral as much as picking out the right food size/type that the coral(s) will feed on when you feed. Couple these concepts with what seems to be about a million different choices for food and you can maybe understand why I would be so confused.
Any other subtleties I would be aware of? As I noted in my other thread I know this is a complex system where less is really more and the end-goal really is to create a perfect balance.
...just trying to do the right things right and learn from others mistakes and successes really...thanks in advance to all.
So, we have a 180G tank and we are moving towards a mainly SPS tank and I was curious what kind of general things should one keep in mind when going SPS?
To date we seem to be doing well (knock on wood), as noted in another thread we are able to maintain good numbers on our tank (Alk in low 8's, Nitrates > 10ppm (need a more accurate test kit), calcium between 380 and 400, Phosphates seem to be at 0, Ph between 8.2 and 8.4) but I want to know what I should plan for in the long term (was asking about Ca reators in chem. section...seems I'll need one at some point).
What about everything else? We are running MH, 2 x 400W (moving to Reeflux 12K but may want to go to 10K on those) and I have read that lower K ratings seem to help create more/faster growth. It seems that the various K ratings eventually are to suit ones taste but is there anything MH related that we should drive to? Are VHO's necessary? We have 4 x 110 Actinic today.
Flow is good in the tank, 2 x Dolphin 1200's and 2 x Dolphin 3xx's that come into the top and the bottom of the tank respectively. I thought about getting some MJ mods and placing them in the tank to add a more "complex" flow as I have heard that SPS prefer this complex flow. Is this something I should be developing?
Food...what about food. This is probably the most complex thing, or at least I am having a hard time completely comprehending this one (though yesterday's lesson from Tim at Barrier Reef made the most sense). Is target feeding necessary? As I understood it yesterday there are two concepts...first is making a solid food chain in the water column where you can add food supplements that create a solid cycle from the smallest to the largest "things" that your reef will feed on.
Second is the concept of "target" feeding...as I understand not necessarily squirting food directly onto the coral as much as picking out the right food size/type that the coral(s) will feed on when you feed. Couple these concepts with what seems to be about a million different choices for food and you can maybe understand why I would be so confused.
Any other subtleties I would be aware of? As I noted in my other thread I know this is a complex system where less is really more and the end-goal really is to create a perfect balance.
...just trying to do the right things right and learn from others mistakes and successes really...thanks in advance to all.