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Just joined Canreef
Hello everyone, so I discovered this forum from another member but I don't know his username. He was selling a piece of equipment used online locally and me and my room mate bought it from him and he suggested the boards.
We are starting our first salt water tank. I've been getting a lot of information from reefcentral.com sorry to say. I'll probably jump back and forth between forums for my needs but wanted to touch base here. We are setting up a 150 gallon reef from scratch mostly by purchasing used gear. We'll have a 30 gallon sump underneath and will be setting up a reef tank. We are from Calgary and have most of our equipment purchased. We just need a couple (I think 2 powerful ones would be enough) powerheads, a return pump for the sump (probably around 1000-1200 GPH at 3 feet, not really sure yet and then lastly we need to solve out lighting situation. Anyways, if any of you have any of this equipment or know where we can get a good deal, since our budget is quickly dwindling after the tank, skimmer and RODI unit purchases, PLEASE point us in the right direction. We may even be willing to trade a 50 gallon tank with stand and light canopy (used for fresh water) for some of this stuff. Feel free to contact us in this thread. Lastly, we're in desperate need for some good quality live rock and live sand. We are looking at buying from Golds Aquarium for 7.99 per pound live rock but we really cant afford much at that price. Once again, willing to trade and would love to get let in on any kind of secret place to get good stuff for cheaper. Thanks a lot, Im sure you'll see us around. I'll follow this thread for sure. |
Hey, welcome to Canreef!
There's all kinds of stuff for sale in the classified section on here, check that out... Also, check out the sponsoring vendors, internet shopping is awesome :lol: On the live rock thing, have you considered having rock shipped to you rather than picking it up locally? You'll probably end up with nicer rock that way, though you'll pay probably around the same per pound after shipping is all worked out. |
Welcome to canreef and the dark side of fishkeeping:biggrin: I think Jdigital has some stuff for sale....not sure if he is willing to "part out" yet though. Some people on here seem to speak highly of a shop called Red Coral:mrgreen:
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Welcome to canreef
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Keep an eye out in the For Sale section. Lots of times you can find good ammounts of established live rock for cheap. |
Welcome aboard!
Reef keeping is like most other things in life.... you generally get what you pay for. In my experience buying "used" live rock cost me more in the long run because I inherited someone else's nuisance algae and headaches. (unless used in the sump) |
Welcome to Canreef.
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Welcome to Canreef.
Local Store as following: Ocean City Wai's Aquarium Elite Gold Aquarium Red Coral Aquarium Big Al's |
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Welcome to Canreef
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Welcome! I'm fairly new myself and found this board to be very insightful and informative along with some really great people!!!
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Welcome aboard.
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Nice to meet you, This thread and the nice folks at red coral have helped walk me through my first reef tank.
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I've heard good things about J & L's rock, but again, don't have any experience. I would also hate to pay top price for rock and get rock that is live but lacking in critters, which I think is part of what makes a reef tank interesting... the hitchhikers that come in on the rock. You can request fresh rock which will give the most variety of life. This is the route I'm taking, though I'll be having my rock shipped from Bayside Corals in Saskatoon on the bus. Since the bus ride from there to here is only like 8 hours (including all the stops), this is much more economical than having 30 lbs of rock shipped by air from BC. Being that you need at least a box of rock, your price will be much better per pound than I would be able to get, and you're in a major centre (Calgary) so you're already one up on me (no transfers from an Air Canada or Westjet shipment for you). |
Find a buddy off here that knows what they're doing and you should be able to find some nice rock that's been previously used. But as Snappy said, if you don't know what you're looking for it can be a real big headache. Personally, I have had less algae issues buying used rock than brand new rock. I have learned to cook all new rock (see link in sig if you're interested), and that tends to really help. Nothing sucks more than $1000 of live rock that's leeching phosphates and nitrates into your tank and polluting it causing algaes. That sucks.
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welcome to canreef,
like a lot of what everyone else said you just got to keep a good eye open for deals and definitely go and visit the all the local shops(Red Coral,Golds,Ocean City,...), there will be tons of people here to help out :biggrin: |
I do agree with Myka that if not done properly, fresh rock has potential to be a hassle. The ideal would be to cook it, but if you're interested in retaining the 'critters' and macros and stuff, there's an excellent thread on NR about soft cycling properly... I'll have to find the page.
Found the thread, this is sort of the guide that I'm using... http://www.nano-reef.com/forums/inde...owtopic=180442 |
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welcome. Im pretty new here too, but found some good ppl and very informative info.
keep an eye out and youll find some good deals too! |
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Hmmm, Im gonna definitely shop around. I think we might "double dip" and get our live rock from a variety of vendors to ensure a large biosphere in our tank. Hopefully this pays off if we get from reputable places. I just hope it doesnt also increase our chances of bad hitch hikers coming along... which I suppose will be inevitable. I think we're about 3 weeks away from purchasing some live rock still though. Just got the tank today:
http://i279.photobucket.com/albums/k...1/150GTank.jpg Quite happy with it after cleaning it all off and what not. Quick question. Think its safe to store outside COMPLETELY under a patio that extends probably at least 6 feet in all directions around it for I think 7 to abolute maximum 14 days? Its slightly covered by a rubber tarp too but not completely. Anyone see any problems with this? Its out of the elements pretty good and weather is good for a while. Anyways, keep the pointers coming, we'll definitely soak up as much info as we can. We're newbs but have been doing lots of reading about curing rock and cycling and everything so hopefully we do it right from the start. |
Just keep the sun off it, UV will weaken the silicone.
I agree with mixing up the live rock from different sources, though a 'biotope' could sort of be established by using rock from only one source. |
Ok cool, no sun has a chance of hitting it. That's what I thought was the big concern.
Another question, does anyone know a reputable place we can take the tank to get drilled? This is one of the next steps that we're going to take. Also what price range am I looking at for 4 holes? Or, does anyone have any diamond bits that can drill glass? I would consider DIY for this since a lot of places won't do it. I would just go ultra slow and I think I could get it done. Advice? |
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Welcome to Canreef. |
How much would like a 2 inch bit cost? I really want to get it drilled but it sounds like none of the glass shops around here drilled assembled tanks, only a pain of glass that will eventually make up a tank. Anyone with experience willing to help me out one way or another? Either I could rent their bit or they could drill it for me? I'm not sure if 2 inch is the diameter I'm ultimately going to go with just yet though.
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I actually had my tank dilled at Red Coral here in Calgary, and they did a fantastic job quickly :mrgreen:. That being said I would do it myself next time. I based it off cost when I did mine, two holes were 40 bucks while buying a diamond encrusted hole saw was somewhere around $60-80. Cheapest I found was on eBay and im way to impatient to wait for shipping. As for the hole size that is going to depend on the bulkhead. And the bulkhead is going to depend on the size of your drains and returns. I just drilled for my drains which are 1 1/2 inch but Im not sure what diam hole that bulkhead would require. Ill see if I can dig it up somewhere on the net (EDIT: 1 1/2" bulkhead requires a 2 3/8" hole, found on reefland.com), Im sure many people on canreef would know as well.
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I've gotten a couple bits from mops.ca. The price is good and they will do the job for a few holes.
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Hmm, red coral hey? They might just be the winners as I havent found anyone else really that is willing to do it. I am not that scared of doing it myself at all, I think I'd just give it the time and presence of mind required so that I didnt crack the tank. Very slow would get the job done safely. Im not positive but I think my glass is either 5/8 or 3/4 inch thick so it's pretty sturdy. I'll have to give them a call in the next little bit and plan this out once I can figure out the hole size I need.
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Where are you guys buying bulk heads from? I went to HD and they didnt have any that I could find in the plumbing dept. Is there different kinds that have female parts on both ends so I can attach a filter head to the drain inside the tank and then pvc on the other side? The ones I have at my house (which I dont think I'll be using) have a female side and then another side that is nothing, basically an open smooth hole. Ideas for what I described above as this is likely what I'll be going with.
I think my drains will require 1.5" inside diameter pvc and my return will require 1" inside diameter. I'll likely have two drains in the upper corners and then two returns in the 2/5 and 3/5 spacings at the top of the tank. ___D________R________R________D___ D= drain and R= Return Hope that makes sense. |
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Both of my bulkheads were from red coral, other aquarium shops or a hot tub supply store maybe. Not sure. As for attaching a filter head just use pvc fittings. If I'm understanding you right you could just use a length of 1 1/2 pvc pipe to a threaded fitting which you could attach the filter head. And yes bulkheads come with threaded ends as well if you wanted to purchase new ones. What I would recommend is to go through some of the tank build journals on this site to see how others have gone about their builds. Useful tips and tricks, it alleviated many of my issues. the 1 1/2 inch drains are good, have you looked into a herbie style overflow (search this forum). the return lines will depend on your return pump. If you have a pump that has 3/4 inch output I would recommend running that the majority of the distance if not the whole way.
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I am not familiar with very many "drainage/overflow" models at all outside of a typical overflow?. I was planning on basically having just this inside my two drain holes (One with a 1.5" diameter)
http://i279.photobucket.com/albums/k...1/membrane.jpg Thatd basically be it for drainage as it'd be at the desired water level line. As far as my understanding of herbies goes it just limits the drainage so that no air goes with it, thus lessening the sound? Is that it? I really am lacking knowledge on the design but am open to other options. I would like to keep as much tank space as possible though and feel like this design is close to as good as overflow boxes based on what Ive heard and Ive seen it in LFS's as well. Seems like a great design to save space in the tank and still oxygenate the water and skim the surface. |
By the way, I just wanted to say that so far, Canreef is kicking the snot out of Reef Central for being helpful. I love how this is local and I can get some real good advice on where to find deals and what not. Much appreciated.
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Hi ,
Welcome to the best board going. :D You would likely do even better taking the discussion to the regular forums for it, like reef forum or equipment. And then when you start your build, start a thread in the journal forum. Thanks and good luck with the new tank. Lots of help and info on here. We also have greta info in our library. |
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Ok, read a bit more about herbies. Still havent read as much as I could about actually constructing one, but got a general understanding. Gate valve is installed to "fine tune" water flow to the sump so that can get a bit of an equilibrium in the overflow box where there is hardly any water sound to help make the tank silent.
Sounds good, but wouldnt I get the exact same effect with my design? I feel like the herbie results in lost air injection into the water. How is this remedied? Ideally Id like to get a drain pipe that is turbulant inside it and a bit larger than needed so the water sloshes around, mixing with air, but remains quiet inside the pipe, rather than sloshing around at the surface in an overflow. |
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:lol: Must not have had my glasses on. :lol: |
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