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Old 07-24-2007, 12:21 AM
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Well my tank should be here tomorrow morning, i have all the water and rock in my currant tank, Just curious of the best way to get the tank setup. was thinking about getting a sheet of eggcrate and putting it in the tank, then some sand just to cover it, and then the rock, and then the rest of the sand.
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Old 07-24-2007, 01:41 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cav~firez22 View Post
Well my tank should be here tomorrow morning, i have all the water and rock in my currant tank, Just curious of the best way to get the tank setup. was thinking about getting a sheet of eggcrate and putting it in the tank, then some sand just to cover it, and then the rock, and then the rest of the sand.
Please Note All below is just my opinion only based on my own experience, just offer help and good advise.

• Egg crate bad idea ! This will be just a detritus trap and recipe for tank crash in two years or sooner.
• Sand first bad idea ! also, because If you decide to have sand you must support sand life i.e. staff that burrow in to keep that sand bed alive and this is another recipe for your rock tumble down and at very least just kill the poor goby or whatever will be making home there. Or complete rock work will go down and crack the tank.
• Personally I think if you can not keep you sand live and here you can’t unless you are close to a warm ocean and can replace all the worms and bugs etc on regular basis. just go BB. esay to clean , easy to maintain.

JM2CW
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Old 07-24-2007, 07:32 AM
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I used pvc to make a frame for good flow under the rock and just put some sand in the front.

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Old 07-26-2007, 01:44 AM
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-i went sand then rock, and stability isn't an issue
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Old 07-28-2007, 02:28 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bv_reefer View Post
-i went sand then rock, and stability isn't an issue
Thats because you only have one big piece of live rock... and too much sand
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Old 07-28-2007, 02:00 PM
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I've always done a little sand, then all my rock, then more sand. I've always run a DSB, as in 4-6" worth with no problems. I've never had issues with sand creatures digging down all the way to the bottom, or even a little ways and causing the rocks to shift. The first layer of sand was to prevent the rocks in some ways from cracking the bottom pane of glass, and then the second and final layer just filled everything up and looks more natural to me.

Good luck with whatever you decide!
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Old 07-28-2007, 03:26 PM
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If you're going to use sand, put it in first. During the cycling of the rock, lots of the critters will leave the rock and move into the sand. Stability isn't an issue, just seat the rock well on the sand and it will be fine. Any detritus that does fall on the sand will disappear soon enough, and will help establish the sand bed.
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