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| View Poll Results: In consideration of Tank Crashes... | |||
| My tank has suffered a full crash |
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20 | 13.33% |
| My tank has suffered a partial crash |
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34 | 22.67% |
| My tank has never crashed, but has potential problems |
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40 | 26.67% |
| My tank is bullet proof |
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16 | 10.67% |
| Crash caused by equipment failure |
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21 | 14.00% |
| Crash caused by temperature deviation |
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13 | 8.67% |
| Crash caused by electrical failure |
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13 | 8.67% |
| Crash caused by system design flaw |
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7 | 4.67% |
| Crash caused by water chemistry |
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15 | 10.00% |
| Crash caused by low oxygen levels |
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8 | 5.33% |
| Crash caused by disease or parasites |
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15 | 10.00% |
| Crash caused by Old Tank Syndrome |
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2 | 1.33% |
| Crash caused by New Tank Syndrome (rushing it) |
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6 | 4.00% |
| The cause is not listed in this poll |
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13 | 8.67% |
| The crash was completely out of my control |
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9 | 6.00% |
| Multiple Choice Poll. Voters: 150. You may not vote on this poll | |||
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Thread Tools | Display Modes |
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#26
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It's all about the KISS I agree 100%.
I'm noticing a lot of corals and especially my acans look better in a big tank with relatively new water. I suspect a lot of our issues are due to years of a system running depleting stuff we never replenish to the same extent. I did a few very large water changes on my last tank and I do believe there's real value in doing so as you sorta do a hard reset on these things. |