Anyone in here?

I can't see the pictures on my computer either, but I can see them on my phone. Weird. Tapatalk is convenient, but doesn't seem too reliable for pictures. I'll use photobucket for pictures from now on.

So the liverock I inherited with this tank are heavy and seem more like solid rock vs porous rock. Nonetheless, very different than the Marcorock I have.

Here's an example:


In contrast to this:


I like this look. Looks pretty clean. Opinions?

I have two ricordea mushrooms, one is splitting. Once I get the dryrock in the tank, I was thinking about using one of the liverocks currently in the tank as a mushroom rock:
Either this one


or this one


I want to put it towards the front of the tank between my new island and wall structures. My question is: Do you think this one piece of liverock will provide enough filtration until the dryrock becomes live? Also, do you think the crabs and snails will starve?

My bioload:
3 inch tomato clown
azure damsel
peppermint shrimp
2 mushrooms
15 hermits
4 turbo snails
4 trochas snails

If not, I can put the liverock, crabs, and snails in a 32 gallon brute and use it for a sump until the new rock becomes live. This would be an eyesore, and I really don't want to do temporary plumbing work. But, obviously, for the health of the tank, would do it if necessary.

Let me know what you think.
 
Here is my completed sump and plumbing. The depth is the rate-limiting factor here....10 gallon tank barely squeezes in.



I've simulated both a power outage and a siphon break without overflowing the sump.

I'm considering a square 5 gallon bucket for my drain and skimmer. A round bucket doesn't fit. Then I would have some extra cushion against a flood. We'll see how it goes I guess. So far so good though.
 
If the sand has been in there 6 weeks and you only have two fish I would think you would be OK only keeping 1 large piece of live rock and putting the new rocks in the tank (assuming you have cured them). JMO, I think setting up the Brute would be safer but I think you have enough biofilter in the sand at this point for 2 fish. Another option would be using the canister filter for a month or so as a stop gap.
 
Sure it helps! It's all about how much filtration you have = how many good bacteria or much mechanical filtration you've got. I tend to lean on my bacterial load quite a bit but I've moved over to the good skimmer/phosphate reactor side of the argument in the last few years.

I'm a huge fan of phosphate reactors. Speaking of that...that dry rock typically leaches phosphates like a mo fo. You are going to want to consider investing in a good phosphate reactor to prevent yourself from having algae all over that stuff.
 
Oh and isn't a 20L the same width as a 10g? So maybe he could fit a 20L under there? I'm sure he could pick one up at one of those $1/gallon sales...cheap!
 
I'm going to set up the brute just to be on the safe side.

Mel, I read that dry rock leaches out phosphate. I gave it all a bath in muriatic acid last weekend. I hope that will help with some of the phosphate leaching.

I'll have to look into a phosphate reactor.
 
Soaking the dry rock for a couple of weeks in RO/DI water will also help with the phosphates. That's what I am doing with mine.
 
Oh great. Glad you're doing something to combat it!!

Chris, you're using dry rock? I'm surprised by that.
 
Yes I got a 20 lb box of the prime cuts Key Largo rock from marcorocks. We'll see how it does.

More than 24 hours no leaks so far…fingers crossed. I was kind worried about the JBJ due to the way the bottom is designed.
 
myrygysa.jpg

Here is the stand and tank leak testing :)
 
How's your tank doing Chris?

I've got to do some tank maintenance today....having a slight hair algae outbreak. I forgot to ask the wife to change out filter socks while I was out of town.
I'll post a new pic after I get the glass cleaned up.
 
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