deneed4spd
Senior Member
I see u made the r2r email. Awesome!!
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Looking good! It's really too bad fish are boring from the top down because everything else seems to look better from that perspective. Maybe for your next build you can take some inspiration from the automated canopy lifts but flip it upside down so you can raise and lower your whole tank.
One of the reasons I am in this hobby is due to the relationships that are present among the different species of animals in the ocean. I have clownfish that host in corals (since there's no anemone), the shrimp goby and pistol shrimp pairing and the mimicry of the Midas Blenny with the anthias.
Just in the 5 minutes you can definately tell which fish is king of the castle.
So, lately I have been complaining that my reef has not been looking great; poor polyp extension, STN, etc...
I may have solved has been plaguing my tank. My salinity level!
After using the new fluid, I found out that my refractometers were calibrating out to 1.030 to 1.031.
Still think you have an awesome reef but happy you found the issue and you can fix it.
On a side note..
What settings are you using on your camera for the FTS shots?
There are few things worse than having a problem whose cause you can't identify and not being able to work toward a solution. Glad you found the reason and that it was an easy fix.







Tonight, I learned a lot. About photography.
And apparently, some of that comes down to which toys you have to play with; and knowing how to use them.
A little while back, I bribed Chris (Kriens) with a meal and cookies to come over and show me how to use my new Canon camera.
I started off with showing him how I usually take pictures; basically pick a mode and point and shoot. He suggested a few things for me to look at while taking the pictures so I can get the shots I want.
Then, the fun started. He let me use a macro lens and showed me the best way to get more detailed photos. I spent most of this time trying to chase down fish that didn't want to sit still for a photo, so I switched to getting macros shots of my corals. With the standard lens, there is no way I could get these detailed shots. Chris also brought his filter so we could see how some of my corals exhibited their fluorescent colors under blue lights. Pretty amazing what some of them look like; and how some do nothing at all.
I learned quite a bit in just the short time we took pictures.
I do have a lot of learning to do, such as trying to capture a good photo of my fish; they did not cooperate!
Enough talking.
Here's a sample of some of the pics taken tonight.
One of my Chip's Acro frags.
Birds of Paradise.
Midas Blenny.
The male Percula Clownfish in his Hammer Coral; compare to my last post's pic.
The Red ORA Goniopora fluorescence under blue lights with the light filter.
Since Chris let me borrow his macro lens, you can bet I'll be taking a sh'load of pics over the next few days, weeks, ...
I've already searched Amazon and Craigslist for this lens; I need one! I even told my daughter it would make a great Christmas gift!
"Thanks!" Chris for all the information, suggestions and leaving me your lens to play with; and an Acast Marine Porthole! (More top-down shots coming!)
I also took a handful of pictures from my Fluval M60 tank; mostly zoanthids, as my blenny was extremely shy tonight.
So if you want to see those pictures, they'll be in that build thread.