whispurr
Member
I have a strange history with saltwater tanks.
I had a 125 about 10 years ago with fluorescent lighting, not enough live rock, an undergravel filter, and a canister filter. I succesfully kept all kinds of things in there from anenomes to inverts, but no corals. I also had a 10 gal saltwater, when everybody said it couldn't be done - with fluorescent lighting and a biowheel!
Now I have a 14 gal bio cube that is 5 months old with live sand and 15-16# of live rock. I haven't been able to progress beyond the CUC because it hasn't stabilized yet. I'm still getting high readings on nitrates. I just did a 50% water change last night and found a couple of more dead snails. I'm down to 1 snail and 2 hermits out of the initial 22 member CUC. I use RO water, and API test kit, and a refractometer to test the sg. I'm just not having much luck there.
But now onto the questions portion of the post. (Not that I wouldn't mind any suggestions on the 14gal!) I still have the 125gal tank, but it is currently freshwater. I'd like to convert it to saltwater. It's pretty much the same configuration as it was before except it has been upgraded to pc lighting.
I don't have a huge chunk of cash just laying around to do the conversion with, so I need to do it a step at a time. I've considered setting it up the way I had it before - it worked then, why not now? But I can see there would be difficulty in later converting it to a biological-only filtered tank. Unless there is a way that I'm not aware of to wean it from mechanical to biological without killing everything in the tank.
So I guess what I'm looking for, is what is the least expensive way I can convert to saltwater now, fish and inverts only is ok - with the ultimate goal being a reef eventually?
Also, any suggestions on where to get larger quantities of live rock and/or live sand would be great. I've seen it online for much less expensive than the $6/# it is locally, but not being able to see it makes it hard to know how good it is.
Or maybe I should just try to trade my 125 for a more complete smaller tank?
I'm just bored with freshwater. All they do is swim. :lol:
Thanks,
Teresa
I had a 125 about 10 years ago with fluorescent lighting, not enough live rock, an undergravel filter, and a canister filter. I succesfully kept all kinds of things in there from anenomes to inverts, but no corals. I also had a 10 gal saltwater, when everybody said it couldn't be done - with fluorescent lighting and a biowheel!
Now I have a 14 gal bio cube that is 5 months old with live sand and 15-16# of live rock. I haven't been able to progress beyond the CUC because it hasn't stabilized yet. I'm still getting high readings on nitrates. I just did a 50% water change last night and found a couple of more dead snails. I'm down to 1 snail and 2 hermits out of the initial 22 member CUC. I use RO water, and API test kit, and a refractometer to test the sg. I'm just not having much luck there.
But now onto the questions portion of the post. (Not that I wouldn't mind any suggestions on the 14gal!) I still have the 125gal tank, but it is currently freshwater. I'd like to convert it to saltwater. It's pretty much the same configuration as it was before except it has been upgraded to pc lighting.
I don't have a huge chunk of cash just laying around to do the conversion with, so I need to do it a step at a time. I've considered setting it up the way I had it before - it worked then, why not now? But I can see there would be difficulty in later converting it to a biological-only filtered tank. Unless there is a way that I'm not aware of to wean it from mechanical to biological without killing everything in the tank.
So I guess what I'm looking for, is what is the least expensive way I can convert to saltwater now, fish and inverts only is ok - with the ultimate goal being a reef eventually?
Also, any suggestions on where to get larger quantities of live rock and/or live sand would be great. I've seen it online for much less expensive than the $6/# it is locally, but not being able to see it makes it hard to know how good it is.
Or maybe I should just try to trade my 125 for a more complete smaller tank?
I'm just bored with freshwater. All they do is swim. :lol:
Thanks,
Teresa