All Equal In the End

AboutAcans

New member
This might be the only post I ever START lol But I have a lot of people talk to me about this. Especially over the last hour.

Essentially everything costs the same in this industry, all of it. Doesn't matter whether you buy a full blown calcium reactor or dose your aquarium. Use halides or LEDs. Buy Ecotech pumps or Korallias. Jebaos or Ecotech returns. It's just a matter of what people want to fork over up front. Let me explain a bit further.

People would rather buy halides then LEDs because the cost is $200 less. Thing is over the course of 2 years someone is going to also pay for $200 in bulbs for halides. If someone wants to avoid the cost of a $500 calcium reactor package, take what you spend on additives and put the same amount in an account for a year - it'll usually equal that reactor. Buying a DC Jebao return pump (lol), might go through 2 or 3 of them before the warranty even gets near ending on an Ecotech. Same thing with Korallias.

Anytime someone saves money in the beginning, it's going to cost them the same amount of money over the course of 1-2 years to have just started with the better option in my experience. Even things like AP700s vs w360s - if you're a fragger it'll likely give twice the return on frag production. I talk about Kessils a lot because I really just don't care for any other light. Used to be a straight 400 watt DE HQI guy who fragged more corals than anyone on this planet. Took Kessil to to make me unleash my grip on halides.

Point is consider going with the better option and not the cheapest. Essentially it all ends up costing the same in the end and usually you'll get more use out of the higher quality stuff. In the fashion industry people pay for names. In the reef industry you pay for reliability and user friendliness.
 
In general you can get by with a 30 gallon tank and a Penguin filter and hydrometer IF you limit your choices to what marine life can be happy with that. Throwing more fragile specimens into a tank WITHOUT the equipment to provide the right environment just doesn't work out well for them or the owner. Be content with simple things at every level of your entry into the hobby, watch the antics of small critters and hardy fishes and corals and enjoy them, research what livestock you buy, so you never push it too far, and save up for the better equipment/larger tank that will support what you would like to have. The best way to economize is to buy what you can support and advance your skills along the way, so you know what equipment you do need.
 
In general you can get by with a 30 gallon tank and a Penguin filter and hydrometer IF you limit your choices to what marine life can be happy with that. Throwing more fragile specimens into a tank WITHOUT the equipment to provide the right environment just doesn't work out well for them or the owner. Be content with simple things at every level of your entry into the hobby, watch the antics of small critters and hardy fishes and corals and enjoy them, research what livestock you buy, so you never push it too far, and save up for the better equipment/larger tank that will support what you would like to have. The best way to economize is to buy what you can support and advance your skills along the way, so you know what equipment you do need.

With all due respect I completely disagree with this. I think creating an environment by restricting a budget to basic or cheap components is an insult to the industry. Creating a setting where a million different things could go wrong IMO is just straight irresponsible. I would rather not have a tank then hook a canister filter to a 30 gallon one. Reefing is an expensive hobby. I don't think anyone should attempt to make due with creating an environment that is sustained by things are barely meant for freshwater. Even some of the most well known companies in the industry have stated that reef organism are among the top 2 hardest things to keep alive in captivity. They deserve more than a canister filter and hydrometer out of respect.
 
But if you buy the led lamp (wich is cheaper in the end than MH) then you will have to buy more corals to fill the aquarium because with the leds ,they wont grow as fast as with the halides :).LPS corals are just as resistant as somme of the most resistant soft corals.Leds might be good for a LPS tank thogh as these corals grow mostly from food thats fed to them instead of good quality light.
 
With all due respect I completely disagree with this. I think creating an environment by restricting a budget to basic or cheap components is an insult to the industry. Creating a setting where a million different things could go wrong IMO is just straight irresponsible. I would rather not have a tank then hook a canister filter to a 30 gallon one. Reefing is an expensive hobby. I don't think anyone should attempt to make due with creating an environment that is sustained by things are barely meant for freshwater. Even some of the most well known companies in the industry have stated that reef organism are among the top 2 hardest things to keep alive in captivity. They deserve more than a canister filter and hydrometer out of respect.

I tend to agree with a lot of what you said, although I have yet to be convinced I can grow sps with leds (emphasis on the "I" there as I have seen people do it). However, I am a gear junkie in every hobby I'm in. Its really frustrating when I see people taking better pictures with an Iphone, playing better music on a squier, and having better reef tanks on a low budget when I spend the money on quality gear and do it "right" by our definition.

http://www.advancedaquarist.com/2014/9/aquarium

Humbling read if you haven't already seen it.
 
But if you buy the led lamp (wich is cheaper in the end than MH) then you will have to buy more corals to fill the aquarium because with the leds ,they wont grow as fast as with the halides :).LPS corals are just as resistant as somme of the most resistant soft corals.Leds might be good for a LPS tank thogh as these corals grow mostly from food thats fed to them instead of good quality light.

This is a myth. People talk about how nothing will ever replicate halides. About heat, slower growth, etc. Only truth is heat. I have been growing and fragging corals for more than 25 years. You'll rarely see me identify a coral on here because I can't mash by thumb into the skeletal structure and tell what it actually is (meandroid, phaceloid, plocoid, cerioid, flabelloid etc.). It's almost impossible to do from a picture.

I kinda said my piece when it comes to what I think, and that I believe that everything is basically the same cost in the end. Trying to maybe help a few people out and get them to think what they might spend over the long run as opposed to shopping for right now; and the potential harm it could cause to a tank. No difference between a hurricane power outage and an unreliable pump breaking IMO
 
I tend to agree with a lot of what you said, although I have yet to be convinced I can grow sps with leds (emphasis on the "I" there as I have seen people do it). However, I am a gear junkie in every hobby I'm in. Its really frustrating when I see people taking better pictures with an Iphone, playing better music on a squier, and having better reef tanks on a low budget when I spend the money on quality gear and do it "right" by our definition.

http://www.advancedaquarist.com/2014/9/aquarium

Humbling read if you haven't already seen it.

I've read it before. And let me explain that I have no dog in this race and really am not out to prove someone wrong or whatever. There's simply just a difference in opinion. Like I would never keep any form of angelfish in a reef tank. I disagree with that article as well. I think the lighting has come along with over the last 3-4 years.
 
Let me add this cause it's kind of funny. I won't go throwing around names but I ran my Hamiltons into the ground. I was going with E-ballasts, I had 27 400 watt DE HQI fixtures, 14k. The things ran for 15 years until the rivets holding in the reflector were completely rusted and they were hanging by rock climbing rope because I got tired of chains rusting. Took one HECK of a deal to get me over to Kessils. When I did switch, my growth easily went up by 15%. There's just so many different settings and blah blah blah I just have way too many frag tanks and too many decades where I enjoy explaining and sharing, but the last thing it is is argumentative.
 
I've read it before. And let me explain that I have no dog in this race and really am not out to prove someone wrong or whatever. There's simply just a difference in opinion. Like I would never keep any form of angelfish in a reef tank. I disagree with that article as well. I think the lighting has come along with over the last 3-4 years.
Everyone is entitled to their own[emoji4] .

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This is a glass box with circulation and a hob skimmer. ....should I tear it down?
Doesn't have a sump or fancy equipment.
 
Let me add this cause it's kind of funny. I won't go throwing around names but I ran my Hamiltons into the ground. I was going with E-ballasts, I had 27 400 watt DE HQI fixtures, 14k. The things ran for 15 years until the rivets holding in the reflector were completely rusted and they were hanging by rock climbing rope because I got tired of chains rusting. Took one HECK of a deal to get me over to Kessils. When I did switch, my growth easily went up by 15%. There's just so many different settings and blah blah blah I just have way too many frag tanks and too many decades where I enjoy explaining and sharing, but the last thing it is is argumentative.
I wish I could have that success with kessils. I love the lights, but I couldn't make them work for me.

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This is a glass box with circulation and a hob skimmer. ....should I tear it down?
Doesn't have a sump or fancy equipment.

Yes, yes you should and bring it to my house!

Looks great
 
Yes, yes you should and bring it to my house!

Looks great

How dare you keep those poor fish and coral in that tank! Don't you know that these fish will all be picked on by other fish for being "lower class" when they go to school? I think all fish should have their own personal cleaner shrimp, a custom built cave, and most importantly you have to have a sump or else they can't brag about "system volume" instead of display tank volume.

(hope you can read that with sarcasm, nice looking tank.)
 
I really wish the whole MH Vs T5's Vs. LED's debate would die out. It's been proven time and time again that LED's grow corals just as well if not better(when set up properly) then MH's and T5's.

In the long run LED's end up costing less as they use less energy to run, they produce far less heat, leading to possibly not needing a chiller(depending on your climate), and you don't have to replace bulbs every few months.

One thing I will disagree with is the buying a name brand thinking because it has a name brand it must be better. I had rapid LED's on my biocube and they grew my corals great. New tank has Chinese black box LED's and my corals are growing even faster even though they cost about 1/3 of the price. Some name brand products are worth buying simply because of the reliability(ecotech pumps, certain name brand skimmers, etc, etc), but for most in this hobby their time is very limited and spending 400$ on a pump Vs 100$ is often the deciding factor on how long they are in the hobby when the 100$ pump breaks in a couple months.
 
Leds are made of plastic so they cant make light in the uvc and uvb spectrum because thoos particular vavelengths will fry the plastic led fast.Only light source that can produce the UVC-UVB are made of real glass like T5 and MH.Sps corals get hit by a lot of UV radiation in nature wich is absolutely inexistent in all led light fixtures.For LPS and soft corals ,deeper water corals ,LED light is good but for high light sps led are worthless.If somme acropora survives with led light that doesnt mean it thrive like with the MH and T5.
 
Leds are made of plastic so they cant make light in the uvc and uvb spectrum because thoos particular vavelengths will fry the plastic led fast.Only light source that can produce the UVC-UVB are made of real glass like T5 and MH.Sps corals get hit by a lot of UV radiation in nature wich is absolutely inexistent in all led light fixtures.For LPS and soft corals ,deeper water corals ,LED light is good but for high light sps led are worthless.If somme acropora survives with led light that doesnt mean it thrive like with the MH and T5.

And yet there are plenty of SPS dominated tanks around here that are absolutely thriving under LED's.
 
There are plenty of sps aquariums lighted with leds but the best sps +led tanks i suspect they look good because thoose corals were put allready big in the tank not growed from small frags .Thoose UV (UVB and UVC) spectrum radiation in my opinion are the key for a good light for shallow water sps,especially acropora. In humans,without the vitamin D made by these ,,harmfull,, radiation there will be no bone growth.I think its similar to somme corals too.Even the guys that grow snakes in a terrarium have a uvb bulb for the snake to get suntan when it needs and is an essential radiation for manny forms of life .
 
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I have seen plenty of sps tanks, including acros, lit with leds..............

I think you missed the point of my post. My point was that all this stuff ends up costing the same in the end. To consider this when starting a tank. To give the critters the best set up you can and don't cut costs just to have some eye candy for a bit. I'm saying CHEAP set ups should not be made. That is a canister filter connected to a 30. That doesn't fall along the lines of a good HOB skimmer and a large amount of live rock. That's essentially a display sump. Now if you're saying the lights over the thing are T5s, then I'd say that's not a good thing. But I doubt they are based on the growth of the hard corals in that tank.

But my oldest tank is 27 years old with acros hanging out of the surface.
 
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