Step one is not to run to a store and look; step one is to go online and start looking at fish species that can be kept in a home tank.
Step two is to investigate the size requirement for the species, and incidentally any shape requirements, such as 'deep' or 'long' for the tank.
Step three is to go to the store and look, and to go online and look. You CAN get a tank made to your requirements, and they can be shipped. More about this in a moment.
Considerations are now about reef-ready or plain, or you-drill-it. Drilling is not hard for somebody who's actually run a drill. If you haven't, practice on a piece of 2x4" and then with glass before you set a drill bit to your tank. Also be aware that some tank glass is tempered and if you drill it, you will break it. Into a thousand little pieces.
Consider too, that a tank is in many instances the CHEAPEST part of a marine rig. Not so as you get larger tanks of nice glass, but...consider that you need lights, possibly more than one kit, at up to 300.00 a kit; a skimmer, from 100 to 300 and up; a return pump, which can range up to 300.00 and more; pipes, hoses; heater (get a good one: a bad one can burn your house down: don't skimp on this and don't ever trust a used one.) And the live rock: easiest to culture your own off a starter rock, but good rock is expensive. You also need buckets; several test kits @ 20.00 each. And in the very rare instance you need a chiller or a UV, those aren't cheap either. You need a quarantine tank, plus its pump/filter [the qt takes a filter: a reef with live rock doesn't]. In short, the necessary gear FOR your glass box can be pretty spendy.
It is not kind or economically smart to get a glass box and start throwing fish into it. Prioritize an appropriate sized tank, THEN the gear to make it work, THEN start thinking about fish. Learning you need certain equipment AFTER you've lost 200.00 worth of fish is sad on so many levels, including the unfortunate fish. Don't let your sparkly bright dream of a functioning tank get ahead of the stuff AND THE TIME it takes to make that tank work.
Can you use used tanks? Yes. White vinegar can dissolve away the white crud overnight and leave it sparkling glass. Or plastic. Scratches---not so much. Used gear? Yes: two exceptions: heaters and lightbulbs. Pumps, light kits, pipe, hose, all good, with vinegar. See it hold water. See it run before you believe it. Join a reef club even before you have a tank and get their help picking gear Members may have equipment their tank has outgrown that would be great for you, at a very low price. Check out the listing of clubs in your area that we have here on RC, and don't be shy. We were all novices once.
Step two is to investigate the size requirement for the species, and incidentally any shape requirements, such as 'deep' or 'long' for the tank.
Step three is to go to the store and look, and to go online and look. You CAN get a tank made to your requirements, and they can be shipped. More about this in a moment.
Considerations are now about reef-ready or plain, or you-drill-it. Drilling is not hard for somebody who's actually run a drill. If you haven't, practice on a piece of 2x4" and then with glass before you set a drill bit to your tank. Also be aware that some tank glass is tempered and if you drill it, you will break it. Into a thousand little pieces.
Consider too, that a tank is in many instances the CHEAPEST part of a marine rig. Not so as you get larger tanks of nice glass, but...consider that you need lights, possibly more than one kit, at up to 300.00 a kit; a skimmer, from 100 to 300 and up; a return pump, which can range up to 300.00 and more; pipes, hoses; heater (get a good one: a bad one can burn your house down: don't skimp on this and don't ever trust a used one.) And the live rock: easiest to culture your own off a starter rock, but good rock is expensive. You also need buckets; several test kits @ 20.00 each. And in the very rare instance you need a chiller or a UV, those aren't cheap either. You need a quarantine tank, plus its pump/filter [the qt takes a filter: a reef with live rock doesn't]. In short, the necessary gear FOR your glass box can be pretty spendy.
It is not kind or economically smart to get a glass box and start throwing fish into it. Prioritize an appropriate sized tank, THEN the gear to make it work, THEN start thinking about fish. Learning you need certain equipment AFTER you've lost 200.00 worth of fish is sad on so many levels, including the unfortunate fish. Don't let your sparkly bright dream of a functioning tank get ahead of the stuff AND THE TIME it takes to make that tank work.
Can you use used tanks? Yes. White vinegar can dissolve away the white crud overnight and leave it sparkling glass. Or plastic. Scratches---not so much. Used gear? Yes: two exceptions: heaters and lightbulbs. Pumps, light kits, pipe, hose, all good, with vinegar. See it hold water. See it run before you believe it. Join a reef club even before you have a tank and get their help picking gear Members may have equipment their tank has outgrown that would be great for you, at a very low price. Check out the listing of clubs in your area that we have here on RC, and don't be shy. We were all novices once.