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#1
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![]() The bad thing about acrylic tanks is that they are a pain to clean. You have to use a special acrylic cleaning pad or mag float and be willing to clean the tank every other day to keep the algae from building up. If you don't clean it fairly often the algae will build up and be next to impossible to scrub off.
Also throw out any used sand and buy new sand, or if you want to use the old sand bed rinse it very very very throughly before reusing it. During the move the old sand will get stirred up and release bad bacteria and nitrates into your system more then likely causing the whole system to crash and you'd end up loosing everything. Canister filters or aquaclear filters are only good for running carbon in otherwise they just cause problems and become nitrate factories. To clean/filter the water in the tank you will need a skimmer.
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One more fish should be ok?, right!!! ![]() Last edited by fishoholic; 12-19-2011 at 08:02 PM. |
#2
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![]() You might want to consider selling the Damsel and not include him in your new system... Needless to say they are hard to remove if you find that he's a PITA later on
![]() They can be aggressive and depending on what you want to do with your system in the future... |
#3
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![]() Transport as much water as you can and re-use it. Keep as much of the LR submerged as you can during the move. Have pre-made salt water made in buckets a couple days before the move. It you make the saltwater the day of, freshly mixed saltwater can be caustic.
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Winning |
#4
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![]() Rubber maid containers work very well. transfer as much as you can, keep the rock submerged. Do it as fast as possible. And yes the damsel should go, he will cause problems in the future.
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adopting, tips |
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