santamonica
Member
pissant: How long has it been growing? Did you rough up the screen?
I've had trouble in the past growing coralline algae.
Because of excess phosphate in the water.
My corals are looking a little better, and I'm getting some decent coralline algae growth. I think some of this might be attibutable to the fact that the skimmer is no longer pulling out all the food. The scrubber might also be drawing some phosphates, and other bad stuff out of my tap water.
Corals are getting more food, and less phosphate. Scrubbers remove phosphate.
I should probably go to RODI water, but have resisted thus far. What are people's thoughts on that?
Some people have experimented with just RO, and even with tap water, for a reef. But no results have been reported. Theoretically a scrubber should remove what needs to be removed, but then it becomes a matter of speed.
And I think you can let it go for more than one week if it's just lightly grown, let it get about 1/2 inch thick
No, every week even if it is thin.
I've had trouble in the past growing coralline algae.
Because of excess phosphate in the water.
My corals are looking a little better, and I'm getting some decent coralline algae growth. I think some of this might be attibutable to the fact that the skimmer is no longer pulling out all the food. The scrubber might also be drawing some phosphates, and other bad stuff out of my tap water.
Corals are getting more food, and less phosphate. Scrubbers remove phosphate.
I should probably go to RODI water, but have resisted thus far. What are people's thoughts on that?
Some people have experimented with just RO, and even with tap water, for a reef. But no results have been reported. Theoretically a scrubber should remove what needs to be removed, but then it becomes a matter of speed.
And I think you can let it go for more than one week if it's just lightly grown, let it get about 1/2 inch thick
No, every week even if it is thin.