I have this stylophora colony that has grown really densely and thickly. When I recently went to trim it back significantly I was really surprised how difficult it is to cut. I could cut some smaller branches with a lot of effort, but couldn’t even make a dent in the thicker arms much less the base. It is harder than normal live rock, and much harder than any other hard coral I’ve fragged before. Think of trying to cut through rock inside the tank basically.
I’ve tried regular bone cutters, the sharper Rio Precision Coral Clipper, Maxspect Coral Hand Saw. The coral is on a large cemented-together decorative rock structure that I basically can’t take out of the tank without causing widespread damage to other corals. I thought about going at it with a hammer/chisel but I’m worried it will break the rock (or the tank) before it breaks off the coral.
Any other ideas from you guys? What I would like is some kind of powered saw that is ok being used underwater and also won’t leak something toxic into the water. I have a Dremel with diamond blades and the flex shaft extension, but I’m not sure if that is safe to use in the tank. Seems like there should be underwater safe power tools but I’m clueless about them.
I’ve tried regular bone cutters, the sharper Rio Precision Coral Clipper, Maxspect Coral Hand Saw. The coral is on a large cemented-together decorative rock structure that I basically can’t take out of the tank without causing widespread damage to other corals. I thought about going at it with a hammer/chisel but I’m worried it will break the rock (or the tank) before it breaks off the coral.
Any other ideas from you guys? What I would like is some kind of powered saw that is ok being used underwater and also won’t leak something toxic into the water. I have a Dremel with diamond blades and the flex shaft extension, but I’m not sure if that is safe to use in the tank. Seems like there should be underwater safe power tools but I’m clueless about them.