Changing Nano Tank

Hi All-I'm primarily a freshwater keeper and have been for a long time. Conversely I've never been a serious marine fish guy. I inherited a Pygmy Angel and a Damselfish which have been living in a 12 gallon Uniquarium with filter built into the back. (I know, far from ideal, but it was the best I could do at the time). Long story short, my neighbor was moving and I rescued them. I feel bad for the little buggers and have made arrangements to get a 40 gallon tank (36 x 18) for them. The Uniquarium has been running about 6 months and gets a water change every 2 weeks. If I use the live sand, rock and bio media from the Uniquarium in the new 40 gallon will I end up going through a cycle? Obviously I would have to add more sand, rock and bio for the new aquarium given that it's larger. I just don't want to put the little guys in harms way. Any advice/input is appreciated. Thank you.
 
If I use the live sand, rock and bio media from the Uniquarium in the new 40 gallon will I end up going through a cycle? Obviously I would have to add more sand, rock and bio for the new aquarium given that it's larger. I just don't want to put the little guys in harms way. Any advice/input is appreciated. Thank you.

If your going to add everything from the old tank , and all the new stuff is dry(dry rock, dry sand, etc), it should be fine, but certainly not a guarantee. Not sure what bio media is, but I'm going to assume its someplace where bacteria are allowed to grow? Unlike FW, rock in a SW tank is the biomedia.

What I would do is get new sand, and new live/dry rock, and start the tank to cycle. Once cycled, add all the other stuff from the smaller tank, transfer fish over and not worry about it.
 
If your going to add everything from the old tank , and all the new stuff is dry(dry rock, dry sand, etc), it should be fine, but certainly not a guarantee. Not sure what bio media is, but I'm going to assume its someplace where bacteria are allowed to grow? Unlike FW, rock in a SW tank is the biomedia.

What I would do is get new sand, and new live/dry rock, and start the tank to cycle. Once cycled, add all the other stuff from the smaller tank, transfer fish over and not worry about it.

Sorry, I should have explained. It's kind of like Fluval Biomax, but thicker. Almost cement-like rings in the wet-dry chamber.

I see what you're saying. How long do you think it will take to cycle? (Wanna keep the little guys confined the least amount of time that I can while of course keeping them safe). And I'm so old school, I remember when people used to buy damsels to cycle the tank. I'm hoping/thinking that's not the case anymore. Thank you very much for your time.
 
While some claim its snake oil, when I needed to cycle a tank in a couple days for a temp holding tank. Biospira worked in 3 days. I have also used DR. Tim's with good results.

I would use one of these bacteria in a bottle products, transfer everything over(your not increasing the bioload, just the water volume), and call it a day.
 
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