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large tank filtration
Is it required to have filtration on a 1000 gallon plus tank?
The tank will house a wide variety of african cichlids. My wife and I are looking into buying a house and might be getting such a good deal I will have quite a large sum of money on my hands, and I'm planning that perfect fishroom for my new basement now :0) P.S. I'll be building this tank out of poured concrete. If you have any experiences or ideas with such a tank, please share. |
large tank filtration
"Chris Gentry" wrote in message
... Is it required to have filtration on a 1000 gallon plus tank? The tank will house a wide variety of african cichlids. The filtration accomplishes many things (circulation for heating, mechanical filtration, biological filtration etc), so there is no clear answer, it depends on your specific conditions and your fish-load. If no filtration was your objective, you would have trouble heating it, so some circulation would be warranted. You would have to rely on significant vegetation to consume the solid waste and remove the liquid wastes from the water, and you would be restricted to a non-reproducing low fish-load. My wife and I are looking into buying a house and might be getting such a good deal I will have quite a large sum of money on my hands, and I'm planning that perfect fishroom for my new basement now :0) Perfect fishroom?... like an acrylic cylinder to house the people (the fish are between the cylinder and the basement walls). Inside the cylinder (which is about 15' in diameter) is a circular staircase from above and your lounge chair.... or we aren't talking about quite *that* a large sum of money ;~). P.S. I'll be building this tank out of poured concrete. If you have any experiences or ideas with such a tank, please share. Concrete leeches at a rapid and undesirable rate, so it will need to be cured and the perimeter sealed (to prevent seepage). If you provide more details about size and construction, I'm sure someone will supply advice. I'd plan on a large sump for biological filtration and perhaps an algae scrubber. This would make your life much easier (water changes on a 1000g are not too bad, but gravel vacuuming is a chore, so you might want to give some extra attention to that (automated gravel vacuum system). When you get into bigger tanks, the water itself (for changes) starts becomes an economic consideration, so the algae scrubber becomes very practical. At 1000g, you can think along the lines of the pumps and sand filters used for swimming pools, especially if you are incorporating a waterfall (you need the extra head pressure for the height). You weren't thinking about a waterfall? You really need to think this through more ;~) -- www.NetMax.tk |
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