Peppie
Well-known member
few are so kind as you Peppie (I corrected your spelling too) eggs easy over and foot massage right! lol
Mojo and I are spell-checkless, Or never proofread, or dont give a crap!!!
few are so kind as you Peppie (I corrected your spelling too) eggs easy over and foot massage right! lol
hmm reminds me of the brain surgeon that likes to cut with the other hand for fun lolMojo and I are spell-checkless, Or never proofread, or dont give a crap!!!
Ahh your not going to get away with that Lorrie, tell us a little more detail, lol
Mike
Lighting is another factor that needs to be considered. In a FOWLR system you could probably get by with compact fluorescents. With some soft coral, you could still get by with compact fluorescents, but most will do better in growth and color with High Output T-5’s. You can customize the lighting color, or warmth, to your liking with T5s too. They can really bring out the great colors of your coral.
Was that progression in the same tank, or did you set up a new tank for each step?I would agree with QT fish when getting fish along with proper water management. Unfortunately, water management takes time to understand and to develop and with the introduction of fish it makes this even more crucial to understand it. When I was a newbie close to 15 yrs ago, I started out with fish and didnt touch corals until I had several years under my belt. When I made the leap to corals, I started with easy corals (softie, leathers) then worked up to LPS and finally SPS. But to get to the point I felt comfortable with SPS took almost 10yrs.
Ok cool so I like this direction, so lets dig in a little deeper. I think the order of difficulty that Oldsaint says is correct and Dnjan is correct on some of the things required for each. So with that in mind lets explore a bit.
FO or fish only = with a Fo tank you can still build a good base to be able to upgrade your tank to softy tank or sps if you set it up with that in mind. So one should look for the same style equipment you could use down the line, so Protein skimmer, heaters (always twice as much for redundancy) possible use of ozone, UV, carbon and so on. Lighting does not have to be that good, just enough to see the fish good. You still going to have to cycle the tank and watch your nitrogen based levels by testing, but calcium and alk and magnesium are not really required as the demand is low.
SO lets say I start here and have a FO with live rock and sand and its been up for anywhere from 6 months to year. Now I got the ich so whats the next step to get into a reef tank??
Mojo
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