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#1
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![]() I'd put them in right away. Make sure the temps and salinities match or you'll have to acclimate. Then keep an eye on your water parameters for the next few days.
Did you transport a sandbed too?
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#2
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![]() i second that , i did a 90g yesterday.
we balanced everything up and in went fish , corals and everything else Steve |
#3
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![]() Thanks for the quick reply.
I love those answers, as it means I don't have to worry about fish in a 65 gallon drum for days and days. How long should I let the salt "keep" in the water after mixing it in though? 2 hours? 4 hours? 8 hours or are you saying instantly after mixing? |
#4
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![]() I just read phantom's post and now am a bit confused. Some say right away, and others say wait. Phamtom, even with 65 gallons of old water and the live rock that's not good enough and I have to treat the cycling as if everything is brand new?
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#5
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![]() How long was the rock was out of water?
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#6
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![]() I just switch over from a 72G to a 180G . I aged the water in garbage cans, the sump, and an old 50G tank for a couple of days, then moved the rock in, filling the tank as my wife and I aquascaped, being carefull not to let the rock dry out. The next day in went the fish.
Of course a few shrooms and zoos end up going in with the rock, so they became my test corals. A week later since my test corals were doing OK and the parameters were still OK, my soft corals and lps went in along with a test SPS frag. After a 5 days and a red bug treatment my SPS went in. So far all is well and after 1 month the corals are starting to "color" nice and nitrates are below 1 (they peaked at 2.5) Your fish will do much better than in a drum if you can get them into your tank as soon as possible, so long as you're not using any new live rock, and you're careful not to kill off your old live rock. |
#7
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![]() The rock was never out of water, not including the instant move from the tank instantly into the 65 gallon drum.
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#8
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![]() You are getting different answers because everyone has different methods, many will work, you just have to choose one that fits your situation best. Are there corals involved? If not, I would fill the 210g with fresh water, get the pumps going and then add the salt and dechlor/heavy metal eliminator. It may take a few hours until the salt mixes and you can get an accurate salinity reading. If you have 65 gallons to add of old water, only mix up the difference.
Once the water is the correct salinity and temperature, pump about half of the drum water into the 210g. Then, drip the new tank water into the drum over the next hour. Once the drum is again full, add most of it back into the 210g. Wait a few minutes for the water to mix in the tank, then add the rock and fish(i reccomend you also drip the rock although i have not in the past and did not see any abnormal effects). Add the rest of the drum water. This method worked fine for us many many times. As long as you get the salinity and temp fairly equivalent between what the fish are used to and what they are going into, they should be fine. HTH |
#9
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![]() humm well i suggest that you mix up the new tank as stated let mix for 12-24hrs with an airstone and power head to ensure its aerated then slowly drip using an air line with a knott in it into the 65 gal do this for about 5-10hr taken water out when its getting full and put it back into the display. this way there is alot less stress on the fish. if you are not in a rush drip longer, then just toss everything in.
you can rush it and just toss them in but, your stressing them if teh waters not exactly perfect, its one thing to do a big water change (kinda what your doing) but with a big water change the have the comforit of there enviroment where as here they don't know what else is in this new tank the enviroment will be completely different. So i would be patient if you have the time. Kyle |