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#11
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Mike, you'd be wise to visit some Calgary reefers to save you some grief. I for one would welcome you to my home, PM me if you'd like.
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http://www.canreef.com/ftotm/sept05/index.php |
#12
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Quote:
Consider small, hardy fish & invertibrates & add the well after you set up your live rock and soon to be live sand bed. Nothing good happens fast, but if you take your time, you could have a very nice looking tank that is stable & ready for the long haul. Stick with the basics: don't overstock, don't over-feed, make regular H2O changes using a quality salt mix & RO or RO/DI if you can, do regular tank maintenance & treat the tank as a system! It's not a "fish tank", think of it as a garden or ecosystem. The fish are only a small part of it and that is one of the reasons reeftanks are sooooo captivating /addicting. |
#13
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Excellend advice so far for you.
If you are going to use a 55 with 30g sump eventually, buy your protein skimmer according to that water volume. And you cant use the published gallon ratings, come here to find out some models you should use. I would go skimmerless for now, then get an in-sump ASM G3 skimmer. For lighting, buy metal halide or T5 from the start, don't mess with PC lighting fixtures you will replace it eventually. I like to over-buy so I dont have to upgrade as much (I learned the very hard way, I am on my 5th skimmer, and have used VHO, PC, and metal halides for example) Just keep posting questions, you will get good answers here, they might vary depending on people's experiences but take it all in and decide for yourself from there. |
#14
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Thanks for the tips, I had the same thoughts about whatever purchases I make being suitable for my 55gal. I'm sure thats where things are headed in the long run. I still need to know what to use as filter media. There is a posibility I could get a fluval 304 from my dad that he doesn't need anymore. I will post my questions about filters in the equiptment forum as well.
Thanks again. |
#15
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Your filter media is your live rock.
Some people will "baste" their rocks with a turkey baster to kick up all the junk, then run mechanical filtration for a day or so, then wash out the sponges. Many people dont run any mechanical filtration at all. Some run carbon on and off too |
#16
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I've liked a "layered" method to filter my aquariums; where several methods are used; overlapping for success. aggressive skimming, live rock & DSB, refugia, water changes, carbon & phosphate resins; I love using SeaChem's Purigen as it can be recharged easily many times before it becomes exhausted. I also run a 40W UV, & I'm a believer. I also include a good clean-up crew as part of the filtration equation; many folks focus on algae control with a clean -up crew, but I'm more concerned with left-overs from feeding time (look at what's in my tank! Pigs!), if everything is consumed, it doesn't have an opportunity to rot & foul everything & oh yes, become all that bloody nuisance algaes.
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#17
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I very much agree with your system Sushiman
I too rely on agressive skimming, DSB, lots of rock, macro fuge, uv sterilizer, and cleaner crew. I don't run carbon or phosphate remover, but that would probably be even better. |
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