Bennytheblenny
Reef Geek
I actually have starboard from when I was debating bb a while back.. but the limestone looks awesome!!!
The tile has become covered in worms, pods and even corals. I love it.
I actually have starboard from when I was debating bb a while back.. but the limestone looks awesome!!!
Im in the processof building up my large system can u take some pics of fishroom setup and 160 water tanks and how they are used in the system
Hope the rebuild is coming along well.
I just got my 350 pounds of Tuaki rock was gonna dry out another 200 pounds from my display to reuse
thanks
Hi , went through all the pics, amazing build mate, I read a few pages back, that you are not getting polyp extension, I know there are millions of suggestions, but one thing I did for my mates 700 gallon, is We put in wave makers, we put one on each side with 4 mp 60's
And iam telling you, polyp extension the next day , and corals have been amazin since then. We used the TUNZE WAVEBOX 6215. One each corner of the back wall, I assure you, you will see results.
I have to agree with krkqm2008....although your tank is more than impressive I am NOT a fan of rock walls...this seems to reflect "old school" philosophy. Although my main DT is not the magnitude of your tank (it's only 215 gals) I have mainly 3 large islands. I have a 125 gal sump where I maintain additional rock and I have a 40 gal refugium with additional rock rubble, (all on the same system). You'll have plenty of rock available for coral displays but you need adequate flow in the tank and I think that is going to be harder to achieve in the rockscape you are depicting above. Of course aquascaping is very personal so ultimately it is your choice.
Just my 2 cents.
Frank
Yes I think 2 will be good to start, put them on the back wall, i think with what you have as far as other things to move water around in the tank 2 tunze wave boxes will be good, it didn't mess with my mates 700 gallon system as far as over flows were concerned, at the same time the goal is to get water moving in the deeper part of your tank, you probably won't see an actual wave at the top off your tank, like you would in a 100, 150 or 200 gallon tank, but the water will move, run them alternate to each other first and then try running them together. One of the main reasons in ammonia and phosphate spikes is the amount of unearth food and fish poo being not moved around enough to end up in the over flows and then into the skimmer, you can change phosphate media every week and after 3 days or so off all 0's it will spike back up again. Also I know it's a pain but do small water changes every day, again I know it's a pain. So Its 1100 gallons, since your back room is right there with the sump and a sink, 100 gallon water changes every day or every other day, for a month, PATIENCE is the key, which I know you have , cause you built a huge system. OPEN UP your rock work, when the first time I saw you put the Rock in, with reading further I thought in my mind, it's stacked up to close to each other. This might cause some sort of a spike, the KEY is to have NO DEAD SPOTS AND LET THE WATER MOVE FROM EVERYWHERE IN THE TANK. try not to stack the rock on the back wall, move it forward a bit, so there is room between the rock and back wall, keep the Rock youhave in the tank, just take alot out, and put it in ur sump or where ur skimmer is, not all the Rock that u buy is fully cured, so if you put in new rock you start back at zero again, so keep the Rock in the tank, just take pieces out, also, do regular water changes, when u do one every month, it kinda spikes every thing or goes to high and then when you do a water change BOOM it goes again , keep things at an even keel. Consistant water changes. Every week , but for now do one every other day or so, until you start seeing healthy bright corals. Which I said was about 30 days, of 100 gallon water changes or every other day off 100 gallon water changes for 30 days, face one of the wave makes to the wall, so it moves the water between the lime stone wall and the rock. When you aquascape it again, make sure to leave room between the lime stone wall and the rock, plenty of GLUES are out there for reef Rock to glue pieces together so they don't fall off. Sorry for the long rant mate. CHEERS!!!!!!!
I am getting rid of all the current rock and will be doing 3-4 islands along with some arches. The dry rock has already come in and I am in the process of building the islands with standoffs so the rock does not sit in the sand at all, but rather sits on stilts to allow water flow under the islands as well. My only concern with the Waveboxes is that I have no way to use the magnets to attach them as I have the tile along with starboard sandwiching the glass. Is there a way to install those Tunze Waveboxes without using the magnets?
Well maybe you can DIY a hang on type thing with black PVC and fit the wave box in them, if not then put them on the side glass . Don't think there is any other way.
I know this has been touched on a bit; however, I can't find a definitive answer. From what I understand limestone and travertine are pretty much the same thing. As a matter of fact- when I was at the store the other day I could see various tube worm tubes made up a lot of the framework for the tiles. They fill the voids in the tile with epoxy and I'm told by the manufacture there is no sealants. I'm so anxious to do something similar to your build. I would, however, use tile as my substrait and try and grow star polyps on it. I'm extremely anxious to do this I'm just worried about the repercussions. As you know, it could be a costly mistake. I'm thinking I might be able to soak the pieces in water and test for pollutants in the water? I also plan on running activated carbon in my tank.
Amazing build by the way