A
Anonymous
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make it a garf award and an additional honorary entry to the sally jo hall of fame :lol:
JDM":3sv5otlj said:Bob,
What were your Ca reading before adding the oyster shells? What high calcium demanding inhabitants do you keep? Have you tested your tap water for Ca? What level is it? Do you have numbers of the calcium usage for your system? What is the rate the oyster shells supply the calcium? How often do you need to add more oyster shells due to them being dissolved into your system?
LordNikon":lb6lap1v said:It must be 400ppm since he says he doesnt dose?
LordNikon":10sbr7p5 said:I also want to know what lighting is being run his tank
Guy":1lhs5adi said:LordNikon":1lhs5adi said:It must be 400ppm since he says he doesnt dose?
That's not necessarily true. If the tap water was say 50ppm and he added 1 gallon of water tap water a day it could easily maintain a Ca of 400ppm if the consumption rate was low, like 1ppm per day.
beaslbob":w3xoug6e said:Dr. Randy Holmes-Farley stated that calcium carbonate does begin to dissolve at ph of 7.9 or so. I measured my just before lights on ph as ~ 7.8 (aquarium pharm***** test kit brown). Additionally, other sources have stated that caclium carbonate dissolves at ph lower than 8 to buffer water at a ph of 8.2 or so. Daytime ph of the 55g has been 8.4 for two years.
beaslbob ~400w top are 6500k 2 utility fixtures overdriving 2x the 4 tubes to an estimated 55w/tube. In tank refugium lights are 2 utility fixtures with 4 40w NO 4100k and non overdriven. total cost $50 with tubes. :lol:[/quote said:That explains the yellow look. Bob, ever consider running a couple 10K's in there?
beaslbob":hi5t3y9r said:Again the only thing that could have risen the calcium in the 55g and only in the 55g is the crushed oyster shells.
LordNikon":1nh0jazt said:Dont think that sps will last under low lighting then..
mariner":10191y8f said:Chris,
I've just got 6 Normal Output 40w fluoresent bulbs (total of 240 watts), and they're in shoplight fixtures that I got at HD. Color temps are 2 actinic, 1 10,000k, 2 6500k and 1 5,000k.
Possibly one of the cheapest reef lighting systems ever devised
Mariner
mariner":10191y8f said:Chris,
Yeah, it surprises me sometimes how well things are doing with this light. I'm having good luck with the easier SPS that I've got, (monti's and pocillopora) but I'm not even going to try some of the SPS that I'm sure would need more light.
The "yellow acro" is a frag that Yoda gave me in April. We think it may be a bali slimer, or something close. Here's a pic of it on June 24, 2004
Here it is as of today, August 18, less than two months later.
Mariner
beaslbob":jrs8uh6m said:But then when you consider they have found a reef at 250' deapth using 1 % of the surface par and 5% of the shallow water par, that should not be too surprising.