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#1
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![]() Well thank you guys for answering.
![]() If I am going to be dropping a fair amount of money on an upgrade I want to make sure that everthing is going to be right for my fish and that they will be happy. |
#2
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![]() Its been often said that in Marine bigger is better. If you own your own house, build as big as you can fit!
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always just 2cents until im broke |
#3
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![]() Very well put. Do you own your own house?
Where are you going to put the tank? Can your floor support the tank? How big are your doorways to bring a tank in or build one on site? |
#4
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![]() You need a 5000' long tank minimum.
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This and that. |
#5
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![]() Just don't forget to consider your ongoing maintenance budget. In my opinion there is a point where bigger is not always better. Bigger is also more expensive; time and money. More water means larger water changes, more salt, a larger more expensive skimmer, more lights, heating, cooling, etc..
For example, if today you had to the time, the space and money to set up a 150g 6 foot tank or a 500g 6 foot tank choosing the 500g because "bigger is always better" might not actually be better in the long term. The 500g tank is going to cost you more in time and money to maintain. This tends to be the cause of many tank shut downs. Having said that, some people are perfectly fine maintaining larger tanks long term :-) |
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