Dunno if you guys follow Parker’s reef. He built one on his dream reef aquarium. It’s been a few years since I watched it. But I think he used rams for the canopy opening and a garage door opener for the light rack up and down.
No one asked, but I just remembered this thread and took a pictureI was planning on buying some to build a hanging light rack as well. The main thing holding me back originally was the cost of shipping.
However, I ended up finding a solution that for me felt even better. I put a couple small, low-profile, anchors into the ceiling and then hung the lights with fishing line. While it took a bit of fussing to get them level, and to make sure the cord wasn't pulling it crooked, from a distance it looks like the lights are floating and up close looks nice. I can grab a pic if you (or anyone) is interested.
Dunno if you guys follow Parker’s reef. He built one on his dream reef aquarium. It’s been a few years since I watched it. But I think he used rams for the canopy opening and a garage door opener for the light rack up and down.
My bad. Could be.I believe the light rack is powered using parts from an stand-up desk
Looks fantastic. I want to hang my lights and was going to build a box canopy to hide the lights. Then hang that to chains or braided wire (industrial look) to a mount on the ceiling. After seeing your pic, I'm rethinking that!No one asked, but I just remembered this thread and took a picture
Here's the hanging lights from a distance.
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Getting them hung and lined up took probably an hour total, and under $5 in parts. I'm very happy with it compared to what I was going to do with rails. The hangers are very simple and small ones I had in a random drawer. Lights are light enough they're more than adequate.
Frag it up ASAP (if you have a band saw) and maybe KCl dip (reef primer) or your dipping strategy if you have it. Then maybe put them in different spots in the tank to isolate or give them different lighting/flow conditions.View attachment 52913
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Noticed my big dragon soul torch suddenly has a couple very unhappy heads. Is this brown jelly disease? Something else? Seems to be already very rapidly from head to head.
Going to try and pull it for a KFC dip unless there’s a better suggestion.
Frag it up ASAP (if you have a band saw) and maybe KCl dip (reef primer) or your dipping strategy if you have it. Then maybe put them in different spots in the tank to isolate or give them different lighting/flow conditions.
I honestly haven't had much luck with KFC dips. The dying polyps would hold on a little longer if I treated for 4+ days consecutively in a separate container, but still eventually died. But I have had luck with the fragging and scattering method.
These often seem to bring trouble. I gave away the only hammer I owned during the last special frag swap (which was healthy though), gonies do it for me for now (and my son for some odd reason does not like torches).Erin texted me the same advice. I don’t have a bandsaw but I’ll try and chop it up anyway. My phosphate was pretty high for a lot of this growth so maybe the skeleton is kinda soft
I just finished a peroxide and lugols dip and cleaned out the infected heads. I’ll give it a few hours in the sump and then frag up what still looks OK.
Glad you like em! You can play with surface agitation so effect shimmer as well. Just an idea. Might be easier than moving the lights around.