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#1
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![]() would my 24x24x18 45g cube-ish still be considered nano? don't know the answer heh
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Everything I put in my tank is fully dependant on me. |
#2
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![]() I think if you have really tiny fish, then it counts as a nano...
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Brad |
#3
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![]() I think so. My general rule is anything 33 and under is a nano, unless it is a cube, cube-ish, cube inspired, cube-esqe or equi-sided. If it falls into the later categories, then I tend to think anything under 100 gallons is a nano...
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My Tank: 135G display, 45G Sump, 20G top off. 2 x 400 W, Bullet 1.5, Snapper Return, Profilux. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ My Photo Website |
#4
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![]() Really in the big scheme of things if you are defining nano, compared to the ocean isn't everything a nano...
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#5
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![]() I dunno, I wouldn't have thought it as nano myself but I guess everyone will have their own definition of what constitutes nano.
One of my tanks is a 40g semi cube, 24x24x12 ... it's more of a frag tank shape than anything because of it's over the top shallowness. It houses two carpet anemones, which, well, most people won't agree that a carpet belongs in a "nano" let alone two so to ease my shame I don't call it a nano as long as they're in there. ![]() But if I had made it into a mini reef with multiple colonies of whatever, then I might have called it a nano. I always thought the cutoff was more around 30g but I guess I see Todd's point in that cube tanks tend to be smaller in stature so the cutoff is higher for those. I'll disagree on his cutoff point at 100g because that would make my 110g cube nearly a nano and at 30x30x30 it's quite a behemoth of a tank and it happens to be the largest tank I have with water in it. ![]()
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-- Tony My next hobby will be flooding my basement while repeatedly banging my head against a brick wall and tearing up $100 bills. Whee! |
#6
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![]() Quote:
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My Tank: 135G display, 45G Sump, 20G top off. 2 x 400 W, Bullet 1.5, Snapper Return, Profilux. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ My Photo Website |
#7
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![]() ![]() To be honest I've never really understood the distinction of a nano tank versus not a nano. I guess a 5g tank has different considerations than a 500g tank, so I see that there really are two distinct categories, but I've never really thought much about where the boundary really is. A 5g is easy to classify and a 500g is easy to classify but how does one define say a 50g?
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-- Tony My next hobby will be flooding my basement while repeatedly banging my head against a brick wall and tearing up $100 bills. Whee! |
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