I moved the corals of the Red Sea Max 250 tonight. Water tests are good and the temperature is stable at 78-79 degrees. As in the previous video I said I bought a cooler and JBJ works great, but the $ 35 I spent was on a Rainbow Lifegard thermometer is a waste of time. I thought it was cool because the external tank and the temperature, the time (as I can not see a clock), but more importatnly had a light. He said 1.5 to 2 degrees higher, so I swapped back and in the evening for another.Same results! The Economic Coralife $ 9 is the way to go if you need a digital. The second I pulled them out of the other container, rinse the probe and the wire, and both were 2 / 10 of the cooler temperature display. More expensive is not always better. If any tank seems to be on the road. As you can tell the title of the video, I noticed a few spots of light brown algae in the sand and also on some of the most brilliant Tufo type of live rock. Hopefully it will not last long, but part of the joy of newTank. If all the levels remain consistent, I'll probably Perculas my anemone and move this weekend. I lost my Lawnmower Blenny, than to try it, the journey to the new tank in a piece of rock and decided to do was found at the bottom of one of the buckets. He was still alive when I found it, but when I went back to the old tank, the swan directly into the anemone and that was all she wrote. I lost both mandarins in this transition. I have never been female. My guess is my Coral...
Tags: aquarium reef, saltwater tank, salt water reef, red sea max 250, reef, live rock, live sand, DSB, deep sea, protein, protein skimmer, filter, filter media, pump, salinity, hydrometer, sea salt, enclosed, nano, nano cube, cube, red sea max, salt water, saltwater, aquarist, hobby, aquarium, reef tank, reef aquarium, t5, LED, lights, metal halide, timer, red sea, red sea max 130, red sea max 500, sea max, anemone, Percula, Clown Fish, Clownfish
No comments:
Post a Comment