Gee Scott feel free to ask a question or two
:lol:
I always wondered about the limitation of this type of system, like can you do a nano cube with BB? If so, do you have to change some of the things required to keep it going like in a full(average sized) reef? How about water changes, do you need to do as much as in a DSB or other type system?
I don't see why you couldn't do any type of tank with this type of system. As per water changes, you would do them as often as you wish I guess. It would depend on what you were doing the water changes for? If you're doing water changes to replenish elements, that he would do them as much is required. If you are do a water changes to dilute pollution, that is the concept I have never understood. I always thought it would be better to remove the source of pollution (detritus and so on) then it would be to just diluted????? On the DSB part of that question at that again what we get to them.
The hardest part of this types set-up, is it determining how many fish you can keep, corals etc or can you keep as much as in a DSB?
see this is kind of myth. You really have to think about this one Scott. In a DSB type system your cycling/sinking/exporting is limited by how much bioload the sand substrate can handle. According to the experts that bioload is very low. On a BB system your restricted by the effectiveness of your filtration. You can load the tank up with as many creatures as you can have effective exportation of their waste/detritus/extra food. An example of this would be John Saxby, he has a large thousand gallon tank, but he has over 500 fish in it. The only way he can do this is by having a system that effectively deals with the detritus/waste/left over food.
Do I need hermits, snails etc or can I keep it clean and simple or maybe I like lots of crabs & snails, do these affect the system?
you can keep these creatures if you want, I have a bunch of my tank. They will eat algae and so on but they aren't going to get rid of it, they're just going to cycle it. Many people think that snails, crabs, stars, worms, pods and so on are a means of export for algae and nutrients. They aren't. They are merely one stage in the cycling of nutrients, unless of course you remove them from the tank after a while, then it could be considered exportation. These critters simply consumed various products and poop out 90% of what they just ingested. Yes they do use about 10% for their energy budget and growth, but eventually they will die in your tank and everything that they have consumed over what ever. Of time will be put right back into the system. The nutrients cycle.
Where you say water flow, what do you mean by that, tons of PH's all over the place, spray bars, just how do I determine what is enough, is there a formula for a sps,lps etc? If the skimmer suck out so much, do I need to feed tank to replace what I take out.
water flow could be achieved in many different ways, powerheads, closed loops, spray bars or what ever. The concept is simply to not allow the detritus/waste/left over food to sit on the bottom of the tank and rot. So when you do design your flow just keep that in mind..
mike