I think that fully healthy corals can withstand quite a bit of swings... not endless, but a lot. I think that a lot of it has to do with new trends in husbandry with some using too many chemicals, some adding poison to the tanks, some under lighting or using a narrow spectrum.
People scoff at my posts about "how do you know this or that" but I was around and do remember when nobody complained about high alk or a swing killing a coral. Things have changed. I can remember when the only thing that was talked about with stability was your number of gallons where larger tanks tended to be more stable.... that is all.
Do I strive for stability? Yes. Do I sweat if I don't have it 100%? Not really.
Keep in mind that these are out of the water for 7-8 hours a day and still thrive, yet people seem to think that a .5 alk swing is an issue. These, however, have the best possible food available... sunlight.
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I think you and the OP have hit the proverbial nail on the head.
How much of the problems we have relate not to 'stability' but weakness due to the conditions we keep coral in. For example in the ocean the alkalinity is around 7.5-8.5 depending (from what I remember) - but people say 'higher growth at 11' etc. There may be higher growth at 11 - but when it goes down to 9 suddenly - maybe its a problem because the coral is not in a natural seawater state. Flow rates - in the ocean are higher than the highest of our power heads - yet we say its 'stability' when maybe we're just keeping coral in a weakened state that when 'anything changes' there are problems. I won't even touch on lighting (LED vs MH, vs custom spectrums, vs the spectrums to keep the coral fluorescing - which I have never seen 'underwater' (i.e. in the wild).
how much of coral 'death' is because in a 'coral farm' the coral are kept at the same flow, the same light day after day after day - then are transferred to our tanks - where (as we see posted here) - they either quickly - or more slowly wither away?
IMO - aquarium controllers, etc are excellent monitoring equipment and with the trident I'm sure there will be (like with triton) lots of anecdotal comments that 'once I kept my alk at 9 by testing 12 times/day my coral growth doubled) - my guess is that once there is a problem - those coral will be less likely to withstand them. (not a slam against trident - I would use it to monitor alk - just not keep it steady 24/7).
@iiluisii - excellent post:)

