CaribSea Life Rock

Tuffloud1

New member
Can this rock be added directly to my mixed reef tank that has been up and running for 2 years or does it need to be cured?

I got 2 separate answers from Marine Depot.

1 customer service agent said to add directly to tank in small increments but not all at once.

The other person said that there will be no die off and it can be added directly to the tank all at once.
 
It's man made so there is nothing thing to die off. I imagine the only reason to cure it would be to make sure it doesn't affect pH too much when added to the tank.
 
It can be added directly to the tank. It also has spored bacteria in it that starts to cultivate once it's added to the tank.
 
It's man made so there is nothing thing to die off. I imagine the only reason to cure it would be to make sure it doesn't affect pH too much when added to the tank.

Caribsea said that they use real base rock that is mined out of Florida, apply a paint and coat with dormant bacteria.

So basically it is reef saver rock that is painted and has bacteria added.

I'm just concerned that adding it to an existing tank will alter my water chemistry.

Has anyone added this to a mature tank?
 
Caribsea said that they use real base rock that is mined out of Florida...

Sounds like it is mined out of Florida...not taken from the ocean, last time it was in the ocean was 1 million BC...give or take 100 million!
 
I don't know about their rock but using their live sand is the biggest PITA I've ever encountered in my years of reefing. Even after thoroughly rinsing, just touching it clouds the water like crazy.
 
I don't know about their rock but using their live sand is the biggest PITA I've ever encountered in my years of reefing. Even after thoroughly rinsing, just touching it clouds the water like crazy.

Why would you rinse live sand? Seems like a waste of money.

I think there are two types. I bought the baserock life rock and agree, it looks to be your typical florida rock. But if you buy the branching life rock, it is man made. Flatish on one side and skulpted on the other. From everything I have read, there is no need to cure, simply put it in. But like anything in this hobby, moderation of all things is key. I would do it a rock or two at a time to be safe.
 
Why would you rinse live sand? Seems like a waste of money.

I think there are two types. I bought the baserock life rock and agree, it looks to be your typical florida rock. But if you buy the branching life rock, it is man made. Flatish on one side and skulpted on the other. From everything I have read, there is no need to cure, simply put it in. But like anything in this hobby, moderation of all things is key. I would do it a rock or two at a time to be safe.

Did you start the tank with the Life Rock or add it to a mature tank?
 
I don't know about their rock but using their live sand is the biggest PITA I've ever encountered in my years of reefing. Even after thoroughly rinsing, just touching it clouds the water like crazy.

I believe most sand will cloud the water for a time. After 2 years, my Caribsea sand still clouds if I sift my hands through it enough. It clears fast though.

Definitely not a PITA for me.
 
Did you start the tank with the Life Rock or add it to a mature tank?

I actually havnt started it yet. But it will be with 90% life rock and 10% live from my existing tank.

Read as much as I could on the product and people really seem to have no issues at all using life rock outside of dust causing the tank to be somewhat cloudy until it settles
 
I pulled all the rock from my 30g, at least 30 lbs; it was covered in bubble algae I just could not win the battle. I replaced it all at once with life rock and had no problems. I did have additional biological filtration with seachem matrix in my back chambers. It was completely filled with mostly lps; chalices, euphylias, and even a derasa clam, a 2 dwarf lionfish.
I also added a 40 lb box to a 90g when I did a transfer and had no issue.
 
I hope it is better than Walt Smith's Reef Rock 2.1.

A lot of people are complaining that the purple paint easily chips off the rock and floats around their tanks.
 
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