From what you provided 2 things jump out at me. Your lighting is not really uniform in coverage. If it was my tank I would bump
It up to xr-30s over the 15s at the very least, or get rid of the kessils and put 4 xr30 with the t5s.
I would also put the majority of calcification demands on the Kalk, and run the calcium reactor in addition. Check home co2 levels and perhaps running a scrubber or improve air exchange if needed. If You can keep your low ph 8.1 and rise over 8.3 during peak photosynthesis it makes a huge growth difference.
One other thing to consider is sps type, size and condition. Some species I call fluffers. Certain stags, valida, austera, some tabling species, and of course stylo, Monti, birdsnest, anacropora etc. A full tank can be had very quick with less demands going this route.
Many of these tenuis, smoothies and “higher end” pieces are naturally slower growers. What makes it even more difficult is that people are selling and buying DNA samples of these corals, not frags. It takes a long time for a single stem booger to encrust, branch out, and grow exponentially. Do you best to buy actively growing, healthy looking tissue, chunky frags. Pass on the boogers unless extremely hard to get.
Hope this helps, good luck!
It up to xr-30s over the 15s at the very least, or get rid of the kessils and put 4 xr30 with the t5s.
I would also put the majority of calcification demands on the Kalk, and run the calcium reactor in addition. Check home co2 levels and perhaps running a scrubber or improve air exchange if needed. If You can keep your low ph 8.1 and rise over 8.3 during peak photosynthesis it makes a huge growth difference.
One other thing to consider is sps type, size and condition. Some species I call fluffers. Certain stags, valida, austera, some tabling species, and of course stylo, Monti, birdsnest, anacropora etc. A full tank can be had very quick with less demands going this route.
Many of these tenuis, smoothies and “higher end” pieces are naturally slower growers. What makes it even more difficult is that people are selling and buying DNA samples of these corals, not frags. It takes a long time for a single stem booger to encrust, branch out, and grow exponentially. Do you best to buy actively growing, healthy looking tissue, chunky frags. Pass on the boogers unless extremely hard to get.
Hope this helps, good luck!