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#1
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Hi,
I recently came into possesion of an 80 gallon tank with a Rena Filstar xp3 with spray bar and a EBO-JAGER 200 Watt heater. It didn't have a cover or light, or manuals but hey it was all free, and it was working (It had two freakin' huge gold fish in it). I am new to 'aquaria' but would like to do a marine tank. I don't know crap about doing this but I don't mind taking my time and spending some cash. I am planning on buying 'The New Marine Aquarium: Step-By-Step Setup & Stocking Guide' and 'The Conscientious Marine Aquarist: A Commonsense Handbook for Successful Sal****er Hobbyists'. This seemed like a wise first step. I'm not looking to create a master piece, just something that looks 'natural' (ie. Rocks (reef/coral??? and some colourful fish). Question 1 : What else do I need equipment wise, other than what I have, and is what I have okay for a marine setup? If so what is the optimal setup for the canister, with regard to the components in it (ie. foam pads, charcoal)? Question 2 : What are some good online references (ie. web, newsgroup, associations, online suppliers)? Question 3 : What is a good (meaning hardy) setup for fish and coral? Thank you very much! |
#2
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Find a local reef club and look at other peoples tanks. Also, go to
www.reefcentral.com Remember everyone has their own opinions, and for some reason in this hobby, people feel that their opinion is the only possible way it will work and you are an idiot if you don't do exactly as they say. So with that said.... Needs (in my opinion - lots of different things work - this works for me): Protein Skimmer Lots of powerheads to move water around in tank. Good lights (don't skimp here - expect to spend at least $100's to a $1000) Sand 4-6" of argonite sand. Southdown, etc. Don't buy "live" sand prebagged in a store it isn't. Live rock. I like one pound per gallon of tank. So you need 80 pounds. This is also pretty expensive. I also like refugiums, but not necessarily required, but nice. I would not use any filter media including any type of bioballs. Setup a sump under the aquarium with a pump to pump water back into the tank and an overflow to direct water to the sump. If you have some extra live rock you can put it into the sump for a little more filtration. Do not put any kind of foam into your system. Foam becomes a nitrate factory and will goof up your tank. Foam or floss for a day or two to polish the water is ok, but not any longer than that. I'm not going to say anything about online suppliers. I have good luck with them, I have no local store that is worth going to, so I use online only. Some of them truly are awful so do your homework. -- "Peter" wrote in message om... Hi, I recently came into possesion of an 80 gallon tank with a Rena Filstar xp3 with spray bar and a EBO-JAGER 200 Watt heater. It didn't have a cover or light, or manuals but hey it was all free, and it was working (It had two freakin' huge gold fish in it). I am new to 'aquaria' but would like to do a marine tank. I don't know crap about doing this but I don't mind taking my time and spending some cash. I am planning on buying 'The New Marine Aquarium: Step-By-Step Setup & Stocking Guide' and 'The Conscientious Marine Aquarist: A Commonsense Handbook for Successful Sal****er Hobbyists'. This seemed like a wise first step. I'm not looking to create a master piece, just something that looks 'natural' (ie. Rocks (reef/coral??? and some colourful fish). Question 1 : What else do I need equipment wise, other than what I have, and is what I have okay for a marine setup? If so what is the optimal setup for the canister, with regard to the components in it (ie. foam pads, charcoal)? Question 2 : What are some good online references (ie. web, newsgroup, associations, online suppliers)? Question 3 : What is a good (meaning hardy) setup for fish and coral? Thank you very much! |
#3
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If you take Xenas route, i would translate that into this..
wait on the proties skimmer until you cycle your sytem, wait on any xtra ligthing until you have critters growing and live rock stocked -I would start with some kind of actinic ligthing for corals, leaving room for more more later, meaning start out with maybe 100-180 watts, and plan for room for another 100-250 watts later, the latter if your going hard corals in the future. -On the sand, aragonite, or LFS bought sugar fine marine sand works fine too, i dont like the 2/1/2 inch DSB, i put in about 1-1/1/2 inches of sand, then a quart or two of live sand on top -start cycling. i wold take marc's idea it was and dont buy fish, just throw in two store bought shrimp and throw them in there for ammonia boost, see his website for more info. buy cured rock to start stocking, and or buy or acquire some dead clean coral rock and start your pile with that, and throw cured live rock over that if you have more time and want to save more money. now you have your reef and your cycling system with only basic light on it that will harbor fish, some soft corals and alot of base life for cycling. -at this point i would start adding coral chemicals like KENT'S and phytoplanktons, calciums, coral accellerator, essential elements, iodine, iron, etc, as long as you dont see any hair algae develop, keep up this coral propagation factory, soon you will see life spring up everywhere. you will need to keep a real low dosage of phytoplankton, give normal dosage, just dont do it every day, do it once a week, then graduate to twice week, then when you start to see calcium build up, tube worms, feather dusters, sponges, marine critters crawling everywhere, move to feeding phytoplanktons every other day. now you will have a Backbone in which you coul dstrip out all bio balls and filter mediums and keep only live sand and live rock and corals and filter feeders as your sole filter eliminating the need for filter problems(meaning if you dont like your old filter, you can trash can it at this point or convert it to something) -as far as foal im not sure what she means, i have two foam type filters, theyre just simply water skimmers, not foam, actually synthetic, are these ok in your opnion Xena? i have one on the siphon overflow reciever box, and one in the sump just before the sump pump...... wolfhedd "Xena Warrior Princess" wrote in message ... Find a local reef club and look at other peoples tanks. Also, go to www.reefcentral.com Remember everyone has their own opinions, and for some reason in this hobby, people feel that their opinion is the only possible way it will work and you are an idiot if you don't do exactly as they say. So with that said.... Needs (in my opinion - lots of different things work - this works for me): Protein Skimmer Lots of powerheads to move water around in tank. Good lights (don't skimp here - expect to spend at least $100's to a $1000) Sand 4-6" of argonite sand. Southdown, etc. Don't buy "live" sand prebagged in a store it isn't. Live rock. I like one pound per gallon of tank. So you need 80 pounds. This is also pretty expensive. I also like refugiums, but not necessarily required, but nice. I would not use any filter media including any type of bioballs. Setup a sump under the aquarium with a pump to pump water back into the tank and an overflow to direct water to the sump. If you have some extra live rock you can put it into the sump for a little more filtration. Do not put any kind of foam into your system. Foam becomes a nitrate factory and will goof up your tank. Foam or floss for a day or two to polish the water is ok, but not any longer than that. I'm not going to say anything about online suppliers. I have good luck with them, I have no local store that is worth going to, so I use online only. Some of them truly are awful so do your homework. -- "Peter" wrote in message om... Hi, I recently came into possesion of an 80 gallon tank with a Rena Filstar xp3 with spray bar and a EBO-JAGER 200 Watt heater. It didn't have a cover or light, or manuals but hey it was all free, and it was working (It had two freakin' huge gold fish in it). I am new to 'aquaria' but would like to do a marine tank. I don't know crap about doing this but I don't mind taking my time and spending some cash. I am planning on buying 'The New Marine Aquarium: Step-By-Step Setup & Stocking Guide' and 'The Conscientious Marine Aquarist: A Commonsense Handbook for Successful Sal****er Hobbyists'. This seemed like a wise first step. I'm not looking to create a master piece, just something that looks 'natural' (ie. Rocks (reef/coral??? and some colourful fish). Question 1 : What else do I need equipment wise, other than what I have, and is what I have okay for a marine setup? If so what is the optimal setup for the canister, with regard to the components in it (ie. foam pads, charcoal)? Question 2 : What are some good online references (ie. web, newsgroup, associations, online suppliers)? Question 3 : What is a good (meaning hardy) setup for fish and coral? Thank you very much! |
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