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I have no experience but I think it will readily adapt to the pellets.
That should be your volume. Also your flow rate through that section.
No, not the one I am looking for. The polyp on the upper right could be or it is an aiptasia.
Nope, it does have a skeleton. Pictures 15 and 17 have not been identified yet.
Thanks jeremya
I had my SX20IS for a couple of years and was still doing that. I have a feeling I will being doing it with my Canon T3i too.
You can give the 50mm/2.5 and EF-S 60mm a look also.
Yes it is slow flow. Multiply the width x length x height of the fuge section and divide by 231 to get gallons. An estimate should be close enough...
I think that is your best bet. Keep the skimmer cup and neck clean also so your skimmer will operate at peak efficiency.
Sorry to hear of the troubles.
That will work fine as long as you are running the water through at about 1X the volume of the DSB/refuge area.
Sifting the sand?
You would want to rinse it very well which would bring you back to about the same level as new dry sand.
You can release a lot more trouble by using well established sand. I suggest getting new dry sand to restart with.
Gorgeous
That is a good shot, I don't think I got much better with my SX20IS. If you can move the coral you wish to shoot as close to the front glass as...
It should have a macro function that works quite well. You might be able to find a kit for making the lenses magnify or become more macro like.
Might be the phosphate level since we aim for .03ppm.
I have the 100mm f/2.8. If you can afford it get the L version. It runs about $400 more but it is well worth it and has image stabilization.
It is quite fun and rewarding to learn.
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