You didn't know Don but he decided toplace his sump in the laundry room under the return air duct. He couldn't keep any acro alive for very long because laundry chemicals were always in his tank.
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Water change and drastic media removal could change unknown parameters quickly. I'd ask the aquarium if they can show you the tds level of their water and if they cannot or will not go elsewhere. Hell, for your small tank I'll happily give you rodi water and you can add your own salt. As I'm sure you've heard before change things slowly in this hobby, even things you believe are less than optimum. Can't tell you how many times I've ignored that mantra and paid a price.
If you think it might even be remotely possible the favia caused it toss them out. I'll test my tank tomorrow and double check everything. But my parameters were normal on Saturday. I hate to hear that and I feel terrible.I think I should be able to instal an RODI unit in the basement. I might not be able to store large quantities as I plan to with a mixing station but I should definitely be able to make enough for my little tank.
Once I get past this little incident and my tank settles down I'll pull the trigger on the unit.
What puzzles me is that everything was looking and encrusting really well. And just the drastic nature of this incident has me thinking it might be something to either with the media removal or the pieces I was trying to resuscitate that might have triggers this incident.
Guess I have to take my rookie bumps at some point!
Thank you everyone for the feedback. I'll post updates over the next few days. Hopefully it will be positive updates!
If you think it might even be remotely possible the favia caused it toss them out. I'll test my tank tomorrow and double check everything. But my parameters were normal on Saturday. I hate to hear that and I feel terrible.
I get pretty nice pricing on spectrapure rodi units so check with me before paying retail.
I got a big ole chunk of red people eaters zoas today. Probably 90 polyps or so your welcome to some if you want.
Good deal. They are a pretty zoa. I like them.Btw - the watermelons have all opened up nicely!
Sorry for your loss man, I know your pain, lost every SPS but one when we got ready to move and I took the tank down systematically, patiently and STILL managed to lose a ton of corals. It's brutal when it happens, but fortunately, they are just frags. Maybe some folks can hook you up with some duplicates once you figure out what happened. Wish I had some to send your way, but my tank is on the rebound. Good luck with everything!
Oh and if you get your SW from AM they only run RO, no DI (unless something has changed). That's not adequate for SPS IMO. If that's your water source I would NOT recommend a water change cause their membranes could be past their prime.
Have you checked your salinity? A large quick change can cause issues with sps. How long did you wait after mixing the new saltwater up before using? Did you check the salinity of it before using? I noticed you topped up with RO water with kalk in it. How much did you use? If you dumped to much in this would cause a huge swing in alk and PH.
If you remove the infected pieces shut your water flow off first. If you get tissue from a RTN coral onto a healthy one it can spread like fire. It is not likely a bug or pest of some kind because of how fast it happened so I would look at water parameters or something in it as the more likely cause.
If space is low look at putting some carbon in a mesh bag. Passive approach like a mesh bag with not be as aggressive at removing things from the water but it will still remove them. Just at a slower rate.
I like to rule out what has not caused something when trouble shooting as this makes the pool of suspects smaller and you can focus on the most likely cause.
The addition of carbon itself can be a shock to a system I hear. Might want to ween into that, small amount first, then build up.