Tank is mulling along. Still having loads of algae issues. My Reef Octopus 110 skimmer just isn't keeping up. Ordered a Coral Box D500 as a replacement. It shipped direct from Hong Kong, so hopefully it will arrive in a timely manner. I also ordered a cleanup crew consisting of FL ceriths, Caribbean turbos, nassarius, and Astraea snails, along with a sand sifting starfish. I've kept these starfish in the past and they do an excellent job of keeping the sand turned over, which is desperately needed in this tank.
I also bought a Jebao RW-8. The Gyre 130 just isn't working well on the 40 with my rock layout and where my overflow is on the end. If I put the Gyre on the overflow pushing to the opposite end, it keeps water from going into the overflow and the tank fills right up to the rim. If I have it on the opposite end pushing towards the overflow, the overflow is noisy from more water sloshing into it. I took it out and put the eductors back on the returns, but there are SO many microbubbles in the water that it the tank is very hazy and not great to look at, so I took them back off. Going to give the RW-8 a shot.
I also sold my ATI Nanobox hybrid light. With four T5 and a crapload of the most efficient LEDs available, it's just much too powerful. I also miss having individual color control and also miss the intense power of Bridgelux Veros - nothing compares to them. I have most all of the parts to put together a new light to be enclosed by a white CNCreef Asis Pro hybrid heatsink with a pair of 24" T5HO. Will have three clusters of LEDs - one 4000K 90CRI Vero 10, two Luxeon M royal blue, three Rebel blue, one Rebel cyan, two Rebel ES lime, and four SemiLEDs C35L violet.
Fish list is basically still the same. In the past few weeks I've purchased a pearly jawfish, springer's damsel, pygmy hawkfish, and a starry blenny, and the damsel is the only one that has actually survived, though after going through QT and getting into the display, it immediately went through the overflow to the sump, and after catching it and putting it back in the display five times so far, I decided that its new home is the sump, and I've named it Sumpy :)