Hey wannabe smart-guy: My lighting is more than sufficient for what I have in my tank. When I decide to do SPS, then the Halides come into the picture. I am well aware of my tank's needs. Which is why it looks the way it does. So hush up before I say screw the AR and just go after you with my .44!
Furthermore, I don't give a tiny rat's behind what kind of research you do. Sure there's plenty on information out there. And the Iraqi Information Minister also said there are no US troops in Iraq. So take what info you might, it may not be accurate. If your tank is too new to support more advanced corals, it doesn't matter if you have the sun itself under your hood. You have yet to get the correct amount of LR in your tank. That is where the good bacteria attatches itself to the surface area, which LR has tons of. The three little pieces in your tank are hardly enough to create the necessary biofilter you need. AND... the crushed coral on the bottom of your tank is nowhere near the amount necessary to do a DSB, which is most effective in balancing a system that will house complex corals. Nor is the miniscule sandbed in there now made of aragonite, which is the best way to go.
ALSO:
The three blue legged hermits that are the size of grains of rice aren't near enough of a clean-up crew to maintain a tank enough to keep complex corals healthy. Nor do you have any snails. And if you do, it's only like one or two. PLUS: The filter you have on there is the smallest one I think is made. But it is the biggest waste of money you could have invested in. AND: You don't have any form of a protein skimmer. BUT: You want to do corals such as brains that have a tendency to be partial to mature tanks.
The reason the many corals, including brains, in my tank are thriving: I LISTENED TO PEOPLE WHO KNOW MORE ABOUT THIS TOPIC THAN I DO. AND I HAVE THE NECESSARY EQUIPMENT. AND MY TANK HAS BEEN ESTABLISHED WITH THE SAME LR FOR YEARS. IT IS A MATURE SYSTEM.
Furthermore: If you are on a budget, you should be buying what you need to have these corals thrive, not slowly die because of an insufficient system.
But like Broomer says "your tank, your choice." Put it this way though: I refuse to give you some frags for your birthday if you won't take the necessary steps to keep them alive." I don't want to see them slowly die like the brains you want to put in the tank will. Ugh.
So take that and mull over it for a little bit wiseguy.
And I am off work in an hour.
Call me.
Maybe I'll come up tonight.