O.k. I consistently have cyano on my sand bed. It doesn't take over the rocks, it's just in the sand. If I rake it out or blow it off and remove it manually, it's back on the sand bed the next day. I Have 2 gobies that turn over the sand bed and numerous nassarious snails. But the cyano blankets my sand pretty quickly every day.
I have 4 gyres running near max at 4000+ gph each. I have two MP40s position back to front near the sand bed, blowing water through two tunnels of rock work set at max around - 5,000 gph each. My return pump is pushing around 2400 gph through my display.
Added all up - That's roughly 28,000 gph of flow through my 340 gallon display. Adjusted water volume to rock - say 300 gallons of water. That's near the 100:1 ratio at 93.3 gph of flow per gallon of water volume.
I don't believe the Cyano is a lack of flow. It could be, but doubtful. Phosphates tend to cycle around .10 - .2 I use a combination of reefmat 1200, algae turf scrubber, and skimmer for filtration. I also have a denitration factory with matrix rock that keeps nitrates between 10 and 20 ppm.
I'm happy to do a ICP Test if I know what I'm looking for? what drive cyano? I've used Chemiclean once. That removed all of it for about 3 months. And it slowly came back over the last few weeks. Obviously something is wrong with water quality? What is the food source for Cyano? And since it's a bacteria (from my understanding) is there a bacteria component I can use to have other bacteria outcompete this bacteria? I have no hair algae or any algae in my display other than film algae on the glass.
Lots of coraline algae building on the back glass. Tank is 6-7 years in operation.
I have 4 gyres running near max at 4000+ gph each. I have two MP40s position back to front near the sand bed, blowing water through two tunnels of rock work set at max around - 5,000 gph each. My return pump is pushing around 2400 gph through my display.
Added all up - That's roughly 28,000 gph of flow through my 340 gallon display. Adjusted water volume to rock - say 300 gallons of water. That's near the 100:1 ratio at 93.3 gph of flow per gallon of water volume.
I don't believe the Cyano is a lack of flow. It could be, but doubtful. Phosphates tend to cycle around .10 - .2 I use a combination of reefmat 1200, algae turf scrubber, and skimmer for filtration. I also have a denitration factory with matrix rock that keeps nitrates between 10 and 20 ppm.
I'm happy to do a ICP Test if I know what I'm looking for? what drive cyano? I've used Chemiclean once. That removed all of it for about 3 months. And it slowly came back over the last few weeks. Obviously something is wrong with water quality? What is the food source for Cyano? And since it's a bacteria (from my understanding) is there a bacteria component I can use to have other bacteria outcompete this bacteria? I have no hair algae or any algae in my display other than film algae on the glass.
Lots of coraline algae building on the back glass. Tank is 6-7 years in operation.