Michael,I just did a 10 gallon water change , it was do anyway . I also at the same time suck up the top of the sand bed. I will see if it comes back. But also it can be to much calcium , I was good last week in the readings , as someone said it might be a cyno break , no its not that , my readings are to good and also I use distilled water in my tank only, very good water movement ect.
but it is true that it gets on the power heads , but I belive thats common.
thanks
new fish
I ques I should said who that was to it wasnt towards your problem but to sammtstingray about the coraline algae not growing on the sand... sorry
[QOUTE]There must be a reason why coraline doesn't want to grow on sand like it does everywhere else.........perhaps another topic...someone must know. It really hardly ever does....now I am curious as well. If you find the info you are looking for, please share......I do have grains that are coraline covered, so I know it will "take" to sand, but it never really grows across two grains?? I always figured that the sand moving messed it up, but perhaps there is a better reason??[/QOUTE]
cyno can grow even though your normal readings are good I dont think calcium levels have anything to do with this though if you are doing a phosphate readings you could still have high phosphates that are being held by it. cyno will start as a pinkish colored spray sometimes it does get any worse but in my case I moved everything from my 50 to a 100 gallon and had a cyno outbrek that started as you were sayin with a pink dusting and slowly got worse from there.
Mike