GigaFish
New member
I am selling my Lee Mar 115 gallon aquarium with stand, canopy, all equipment and fish. This is a fish only with live rock tank, no live coral anymore. This is a complete functioning setup established for 10 years. I am selling my house and need to get rid of it to prep for sale.
Currently containing all of the live rock in the picture
A Fluval FX5 canister filter
A 48" dual T5 oddysea light fixture from 2015
An Aquacontroller Jr aquarium controller with an 8 port power strip and temp and PH probes.
1 Hydor Koralia EVO 1400
1 Dual Chinese Knockoff High GPH Powerhead (Like a coralife high seas)
1 150w heater (Ebo Jager)
1 250w heater (Ebo Jager)
A few artificial coral decorations
Coralife Aragonite Sand
Dual 24" glass lids to keep evaporation down
A blue damsel
A large black Chromis (He's mean and should go if the tank is being moved)
A purple tang (nipped fins from the chromis)
I also have a bunch of accumulated equipment that can go with the sale. I just need to keep the bare essentials to support and backup my son's biocube and you can have the rest.
The tank measures 60" wide, 24" tall, and 18" deep (front to back). The silicon and trim are black. The tank came with the stand originally but I then added the center section built from 3/4" plywood to accommodate the roll out shelf to act as my laptop computer desk. Its like working under water when you are right up in front of it. This center section is not fastened down and can be removed if unwanted. 10 years of experience shows its all completely stable and strong.
I built the canopy out of plywood as well. The front of the canopy completely comes off to be placed out of the way when working on the tank. The entire setup including the back glass was painted with a black latex paint. The inside of the canopy was never painted but has never swelled in the 10 years I've had it. It has 4 3" cooling fan holes drilled with chrome fan guards that can screw to the outside for looks. No fans are installed.
I recommend bringing at least 2-3 new or guaranteed clean garbage cans to hold the items and live rock when tearing it down. Preferably a strong rubbermaid brute can with caster wheels if you want to haul out all of the live rock under water at once.
Photos can be found here on my craigslist posting:
http://phoenix.craigslist.org/evl/fuo/5680384879.html
If you want to see anything else in a photo, just text me.
If you have any other questions, feel free to reach out.
-Kenneth 480-326-1704
Currently containing all of the live rock in the picture
A Fluval FX5 canister filter
A 48" dual T5 oddysea light fixture from 2015
An Aquacontroller Jr aquarium controller with an 8 port power strip and temp and PH probes.
1 Hydor Koralia EVO 1400
1 Dual Chinese Knockoff High GPH Powerhead (Like a coralife high seas)
1 150w heater (Ebo Jager)
1 250w heater (Ebo Jager)
A few artificial coral decorations
Coralife Aragonite Sand
Dual 24" glass lids to keep evaporation down
A blue damsel
A large black Chromis (He's mean and should go if the tank is being moved)
A purple tang (nipped fins from the chromis)
I also have a bunch of accumulated equipment that can go with the sale. I just need to keep the bare essentials to support and backup my son's biocube and you can have the rest.
The tank measures 60" wide, 24" tall, and 18" deep (front to back). The silicon and trim are black. The tank came with the stand originally but I then added the center section built from 3/4" plywood to accommodate the roll out shelf to act as my laptop computer desk. Its like working under water when you are right up in front of it. This center section is not fastened down and can be removed if unwanted. 10 years of experience shows its all completely stable and strong.
I built the canopy out of plywood as well. The front of the canopy completely comes off to be placed out of the way when working on the tank. The entire setup including the back glass was painted with a black latex paint. The inside of the canopy was never painted but has never swelled in the 10 years I've had it. It has 4 3" cooling fan holes drilled with chrome fan guards that can screw to the outside for looks. No fans are installed.
I recommend bringing at least 2-3 new or guaranteed clean garbage cans to hold the items and live rock when tearing it down. Preferably a strong rubbermaid brute can with caster wheels if you want to haul out all of the live rock under water at once.
Photos can be found here on my craigslist posting:
http://phoenix.craigslist.org/evl/fuo/5680384879.html
If you want to see anything else in a photo, just text me.
If you have any other questions, feel free to reach out.
-Kenneth 480-326-1704