High Tide Aquatics

105, 3years on a road of bones

Or someone asked you “ hey how’s that coral doing and you said great 10 years now “. Next thing you know. Dead. Never say it out loud. Coral gods are always listening. Lol.
I made a DBTC update about my RR prometheus showing it off.

Next day it begin to RTN from the base.

I tell some friends “welp it’s dead”

Next day it’s stabilized and doing well again.

I swear they can tell
 
To those are you with only a vague understanding of the Reef Aquarium gods, or to all of those new to the hobby I highly recommend this article,



Def made my day!
 
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You've got some nice dense growth throughout.
How are you finding flow management?

I've always found the challenge balancing areas in front of large flow pumps where they can literally blow the flesh off to opposing sides where there is nothing to move water.

I'm somewhere between the Steve Weast theory of ” no pump, cable should be seen in a display" and the application of what is practical. So sticking a laminar flow pump on a open viewing panel would likely kill me.
 
You've got some nice dense growth throughout.
How are you finding flow management?

I've always found the challenge balancing areas in front of large flow pumps where they can literally blow the flesh off to opposing sides where there is nothing to move water.

I'm somewhere between the Steve Weast theory of ” no pump, cable should be seen in a display" and the application of what is practical. So sticking a laminar flow pump on an open viewing panel would likely kill me.
I’ve always liked vortechs on the back wall
 
I’ve always liked vortechs on the back wall
Sure me too, in fact, I have six along the back wall of my aquarium.
Still though the trick is the amount of space between the flow point of the pump and coral. And as those corals grow out, the dead spots start to happen. I'm just curious how people are dealing with that
 
Seeing the pumps in the display, definitely bugs me,
But having black pumps on a black wall helps,
I really don’t like pumps on a viewing panel,
At one point, the tank was moderately open, and has a good size tunze style pumping across the back,
I have a close loop going across the front
And two vortex and the return pump on the back wall, facing the front,
Probably would do more close loops if I could do it again,
 
Sure me too, in fact, I have six along the back wall of my aquarium.
Still though the trick is the amount of space between the flow point of the pump and coral. And as those corals grow out, the dead spots start to happen. I'm just curious how people are dealing with that
I had 7 on my bare bottom 72x30x24. Seemed to work for me. Every tank is gonna be different of course.
 
Sure me too, in fact, I have six along the back wall of my aquarium.
Still though the trick is the amount of space between the flow point of the pump and coral. And as those corals grow out, the dead spots start to happen. I'm just curious how people are dealing with that
I put my vortex in the most open water areas I could, and have more or less let the corals grow around them,
But the Coral that goes straight at them eventually get a little shredded
 
Seeing the pumps in the display, definitely bugs me,
But having black pumps on a black wall helps,
I really don’t like pumps on a viewing panel,
At one point, the tank was moderately open, and has a good size tunze style pumping across the back,
I have a close loop going across the front
And two vortex and the return pump on the back wall, facing the front,
Probably would do more close loops if I could do it again,
Remember the Tunze rocks that hid pumps? Gotta bring that back or just drill one.
 
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