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I checked ph with salifert test kit which is 8.15 and I don’t have lots of rock but it’s a decent amount I have in the back chamber lots of marine pure incase the rock wasn’t enough for bacteria but there is a lot of surface area for beneficial bacteria is that’s what ur hinting at and I’m careful with gfo I use a small bag and change it when needed as I don’t want to bottom out phosphatesHow did you check the po4?
Did you check the Ph?
How many rock do you have? and what is the flow rate? sometime when you have a low flow the ph have variations and i think is a very important to check it.
Also if you are using rowa you will need be more careful with it
I test alk once or twice a week it stays between 9.1 and 9.3 I test mag and calcium every week or two but it never changes as I stay consistent with water changes and I don’t have enough coral to drain the elements since changing the lighting and move the torch coral it seems to of extended a lot better but I’m not sure if that’s down to the change in lighting spectrum/intensity or it’s brushed of the cyano on the polypsI think the 2 main culprit may be either too low nutrients or water stability issue.
Get a hanna ulr po4 checker as relying on the salifert is not accurate and you may actually have 0 po4. For me, I tend to keep my po4 around 0.03-0.1. When it bottoms out to 0, I see my corals start closing up. No need to dose any po4 for now if you just take your gfo offline which may be stripping your po4 out.
As for any tanks, water stability is key. Even though your parameters are good, the fluctuations may be a problem. Are you testing your parameters alk cal and mg weekly? Have they changed drastically over the past few weeks? Are you dosing?
As some ppl mentioned about your light settings, I don't think that is the reason. LPS can thrive in a whole range of par from 50-150+ and it is usually the water chemistry that's the main problem.
Ok well and what about the kh? i read that you are in 9.1.I checked ph with salifert test kit which is 8.15 and I don’t have lots of rock but it’s a decent amount I have in the back chamber lots of marine pure incase the rock wasn’t enough for bacteria but there is a lot of surface area for beneficial bacteria is that’s what ur hinting at and I’m careful with gfo I use a small bag and change it when needed as I don’t want to bottom out phosphates
Adding bacteria does not help much in cycling a tank. Most bacteria added, able to stay alive, will be heterotrophs needing a food source and will mineralize bio-waste, producing ammonium and phosphate while exporting the carbon present if able to grow. To bring in the carbon again you will need the brown stuff which will show in the first stage of cycling or and add a food source.The tank was definitely cycled correctly I had a bad batch of salt which kept giving me ammonia I thought the same thing but after adding hundreds worth of bacteria it was still present bcus of all the water changes