mzem -
I understand what you have described, but this would be assuming the reef is fairly close to shore, and in fairly shallow water. This would be the case most of the time, I believe, when talking about the corals housed in our tanks. Now I don't know all the geographical locations of most of the reefs, so I may be way off base here, but what about reefs say 20 miles offshore, in maybe 50 feet of water? Except in maybe severe weather, wouldn't the currents in such a location remain pretty constant? I thought currents were similar to the jet stream, in that the path may change, but the direction stays the same?
Dan -
That is pretty much what I was getting at, the speed at which water moves across the reef. Not having had the opportunity to do any diving the couple of times I have been to the ocean, I'm really only guessing. I have seen closed loops running around 1300gph, through six 3/4 inch returns, and that just doesn't seem the best way to create water movement to me.
Robin -
C'mon, I really wanted you to decide! :wink: These were all numbers I pulled out of nowhere. I guess I am having a hard time understanding why velocity would not be important. doesn't the speed at which water moves over a coral have an affect on it?
Mogo -
Yes, cheap is good! I also change the direction of my powerheads on occasion, but more like weekly.