All of the above advice is good but I don't think that high Phosphate is your problem. Your tanks look very new and somewhat typical for that stage. My first tank had a similar look for quite some time. My first, and best, recommendation is to send some pictures of your tanks to John Maloney at ReefCleaners.org and get a very aggressive cleanup crews for both tanks. Next if you have not already done so add copepods and amhipods to the tanks. These are the smaller members of the cleanup crew that many people overlook. Tuxedo urchins and conches work wonders. I have 3 of each in my 90 gal tank. Skimmers are a good Idea for removing excess organics and are a necessity if you carbon dose. Also try adding phytoplankton. It is microscopic algae that will feed filter feeders and coral and use some of the nutrients that feed your hair algae. Do weekly,10 percent, water changes at least until things settle down.
Here is my 90 gal. I carbon dose 8ml of Vodka nightly. One liter of Kalk solution daily. 100ml of Phytoplankton* daily. 16 ozs of Copepods* weekly. 50 ml of potassium nitrate (KNO3) solution every other day. Acro Power 8ml of twice a week. Coral get feed Reefroids or Micro Vert every other day. 10 to 13 gal water changes weekly. * I raise my own.
And I have a terrible Phosphate/Nitrate ratio. Phosphates measure between 0.25 and 0.6 and nitrate were not measurable until I started the KNO3 dosing. Now if I am lucky I will have 1 ppm nitrate. The Phosphate swing is due to using GFO and Phosbguard. I will be discontinuing those when they run out since the effect is too short lived.
As you can see from the tank picture, coral color is good, growth is excelent, the acros and other SPS corals don't mind the high phosphate, there is very little algae growth and both of my nems are perfectly happy.