I agree that my equipment probably needs some adjustment. Hopefully someone with BC14 will be able to give some hints. Think it could be a loose fitting on return? Did a top-off to see if that helps.
<< A loose fitting could cause this yes..It could also be trapped air in your return pump >>
Thanks for the info on the diatoms. This is my first SW cycle, so I'm not sure what to expect. I knew there'd be a bloom, but this was bigger than I expected.
<<I have to admit, that is actually a rather large diatom bloom. Dont know if you've said already, but what water are you using? and what type of sand have you used??>>
For the algae, should I do anything - or just let it continue the cycle and disappear? Here's my options:
<<You can syphon some out..Add a pair of panty hoes to the syphon pipe exit orrifice, and syphon some out, and you can return the water back to the tank after you done some syphoning. I would not worry too much about the water going back in the tank, as you'll be doing a 50% water change at the end of the cycle anyway>>
1. I'm running lights normal hrs (10000k 10 hrs and Actinic 8 hrs). Should I cut back the time during cycle?
<<Cut all your lighting back a little..Main lights only really need to be on for 8 hours..As your cycling, you dont actually need them on at all..Could be the reason for the large diatom outbreak>>
2. Manually pull some of the algae off the rocks? Since I don't have a filter or sponge, I'm afraid this'll make a big mess? Will this eventually just die off and disappear?
<<Yes, this will help>>
3. Get a CUC? I've heard anywhere from a week to a month to add the crew. I'd probably start with snails only - not sure about crabs and shrimps.
<<Introduce your cleanup crew once the cycle has finished and they will tackle the diatom algae>>
4. Do a big water change. My Ammonia, Nitrates and Nitrates are all about 0 (retested Nitrates today and they look to be zero). I've heard not to do any water changes during cycle.
<<Do the large wter change once your nitrates are down below 10ppm, and stayed this way for a week constant>>
5. Just leave it alone and let nature take it's course. This is my current course, but very tough!
<<Yes, nature does need to be left to do its own thing at times with our tanks>>
Thanks again for the response - any info is helpful. Also, advise on the course of action with diatoms - is there a downside to just letting it run it's course?
<<See comments above about the diatoms, and a suggested course of action>>
Here's a current photo of tank with diatoms covering everything: