It's a lot of light that's for sure. Pros are that the stags love it and I don't have to use ceiling lights in my apartment as the tank is bright enough haha, although the cons are that it's practically impossible to keep much lps and a lot of other acros need to be shaded..
Thanks a lot mate
Thanks
Thanks mate
Haha thanks mate

the Facebook cover photo looks sweet
Thanks, less rock is better in my opinion
There was 1mm sand to start with although it all ended up at the back of the tank when I increased the flow due to the corals starting to restrict water movement when they grew, only put 3mm sand in it a few weeks ago and turned down the flow a touch so it doesn't blow around
Hard to say mate without knowing your tank personally.. Mine never shows any polyp extension on the branches during the day (polyps are out at night) although shows polyps on the main stem, it's also in pretty low light compared to the rest of my tank. In the last few months mine has acquired a nice yellow base which was never there when I got the piece and recently when my nitrates have crept up a bit to 2-4ppm the yellow has definitely become brighter. It's a wierd acro compared to the norm, when you see pics of it in the wild it's pretty much always the only type acro visible, so it obviously comes from rather different conditions to the normal reef area that's littered with most Acropora. Maybe just try moving it to less light if it's turned pale and more light if it's turned brown, it's an acro that certainly responds badly to incorrect light intensity from my experience
Thanks
There should be a couple of pics on page four I think