![]() |
|
||||||||
| Portal | PhotoPost Gallery | Register | Blogs | FAQ | Members List | Calendar | Search | Today's Posts | Mark Forums Read |
![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
|
|
#1
|
|||||
|
|||||
|
I'll leave the tank questions for the experts to answer, I'm a relative noob myself.
I can help you with your camera stuff, that I am an expert Let me know if you have further questions. |
|
#2
|
|||||
|
|||||
|
I appreciate the advice. I feel worse about my pictures now though as I shoot in RAW and edited them in lightroom. Haha. I'll just have to keep working on it. Thanks though. At least I know I'm on the right track.
Quote:
|
|
#3
|
|||||
|
|||||
|
Quote:
In one of your pictures, there are 3 light sources (house light, plant light, tank light) and usually a combination of different colour temp will throw it way off to the point of no return. Always meter on the intended light source, that should help. Most DSLR are pretty smart nowadays to determine the WB if you meter on the correct source. |
|
#4
|
|||||
|
|||||
|
The little grape looking things on the vine is Grape Caulerpa. It can be invasive and a bear to remove once established. The little roots get into your rock.
GFO - Granular Ferric Oxide - Used to remove phosphate from your water. Usually used in a reactor and changed out ever month or so. Some use it in a sock and allow water to passively flow through it in their sumps. If you have algae in your tank, you've probably got phosphates. But you don't want to strip it all as corals and things in your tank need it to some extent. It's finding that balance that's tricky. Carbon - again either used in a reactor or sock in your sump. Used to remove harmful toxin's released by corals etc when they get stressed. Also good at removing some chemicals. I don't think people run carbon all the time, I don't, just when something goes wrong and you're trying to maintain water quality till things settle down. That's a VERY brief, general answer. Lot's of reading can be done on both. |
|
#5
|
|||||
|
|||||
|
That's all really helpful. Thanks for the heads up about the Grape Caulerpa. I've started manually removing it. We'll see how it turns out.
I am going to read more on the rest. Thanks for the tips. Quote:
|
|
#6
|
|||||
|
|||||
|
I did a bit of a rescape yesterday. I stacked the rocks higher and opened up the cave underneath as well as shifted everything farther back. I also switched the positions of the zoas and the acans. I wanted to make room for some people eaters that I got at the swap and put the acans in a better position.
Let me know what you think. Is it too symmetrical? ![]() I also want to add some more fish to the tank. Here is the current stock: - Ocellaris Clownfish - Six Line Wrasse - Lawnmower Blenny - Royal Gramma - Blue Damsel Some of the things I was thinking of adding are: Firefish, Coral Beauty, Goby of some kind, or Chromis. Anyone have any good ideas? There's a lot of room in the tank and I would like at least a few more fish. Any cool invertebrates ideas as well? I have a fighting conch and a cleaner shrimp. Thanks! |
|
#7
|
||||
|
||||
|
I love the rockscape.. your tank is also very clean
very nice!! ![]() dwarf angel can be risky (coral nipping).. I know many people (including me) have kept dwarf angels with corals though. Mine (pygmy angel) nip on SPS but leave LPSs alone.. i think every fish is different.. have you heard Vanderbuilt chromis?? they are awesome chromis.. I had them in my frag tank.. they look awesome.. ![]() you can also try goby/shrimp pair.. they are really fun to watch BUT I would not recommend it if you plane to keep corals on the sand bed because they constantly dig/shift sand.. Last edited by jhj0112; 03-03-2015 at 01:09 AM. |
![]() |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|