kcharm
Well-known member
It's been about year since I took my lumps and sold my 29 gal reef. I learned a lot by making a lot of mistakes.
Well, now it's time to try it again. My thought has been to do a pico, 2 to 3 gallons but with a large sump, 5 to 10 gallons. But, with all the plumbing and buying the right pumps and doing everything I did wrong last time correctly, it won't save me much money over doing something larger (except on live rock and corals and such).
This is what I've come up with...
A 10 gallon tank with a bowed false wall made out of thin acrylic (so I can bend it). The false wall would be set between the long sides (traditionally the front and back of the tank) about 1/3 of the way along them creating an approximately 3 gallon display with a 7 gallon fuge. The minimal bioload will allow me to not skim and just run chaeto. It also allows me to use several small subermisble for flow. For lighting I can use a desk lamp with a 20w screw in 50/50 bulb for the display and a 5000k flourescent bulb for the fuge.
Here are the questions...
Where I want to put the tank is only about 16 inches deep, not 20 inches like a 10 gallon tank. Can a 10 gallon tank handle, structrually speaking, having both short sides hanging off of the stand?
I seem to recall that running the fuge light the display light on opposite schedules reduces pH swings. I either need to devise a way to block the light from the fuge from leaving the fuge or run the lights on the same schedule since the tank is in my bedroom and I really don't want a 75w nightlight, any ideas?
Finally, and this question goes for a 1 gallon planted tank I'm setting up at work as well as the proposed reef, can I just use deionized water purchased from the grocery store in 1 gallon jugs? The convenience factor on that is huge considering the size of the tanks I'm dealing with. If the RO part is critical, I'll go to my LFS and buy it that way, but it's not as easy as just buying the prepackaged DI stuff from the water aisle.
Thanks for the help, suggestions, and comments...
and it's good to be back playing with warm water
Well, now it's time to try it again. My thought has been to do a pico, 2 to 3 gallons but with a large sump, 5 to 10 gallons. But, with all the plumbing and buying the right pumps and doing everything I did wrong last time correctly, it won't save me much money over doing something larger (except on live rock and corals and such).
This is what I've come up with...
A 10 gallon tank with a bowed false wall made out of thin acrylic (so I can bend it). The false wall would be set between the long sides (traditionally the front and back of the tank) about 1/3 of the way along them creating an approximately 3 gallon display with a 7 gallon fuge. The minimal bioload will allow me to not skim and just run chaeto. It also allows me to use several small subermisble for flow. For lighting I can use a desk lamp with a 20w screw in 50/50 bulb for the display and a 5000k flourescent bulb for the fuge.
Here are the questions...
Where I want to put the tank is only about 16 inches deep, not 20 inches like a 10 gallon tank. Can a 10 gallon tank handle, structrually speaking, having both short sides hanging off of the stand?
I seem to recall that running the fuge light the display light on opposite schedules reduces pH swings. I either need to devise a way to block the light from the fuge from leaving the fuge or run the lights on the same schedule since the tank is in my bedroom and I really don't want a 75w nightlight, any ideas?
Finally, and this question goes for a 1 gallon planted tank I'm setting up at work as well as the proposed reef, can I just use deionized water purchased from the grocery store in 1 gallon jugs? The convenience factor on that is huge considering the size of the tanks I'm dealing with. If the RO part is critical, I'll go to my LFS and buy it that way, but it's not as easy as just buying the prepackaged DI stuff from the water aisle.
Thanks for the help, suggestions, and comments...
and it's good to be back playing with warm water