HOB Refugiums, worth it?

mdeleon1

Member
I'm looking into purchasing a hob refugium since I do not have sump. Are these worth having and if so, what is a good brand?

Look at CPR Aquafuges.
 
I am a big supporter of refugiums. I cannot say if the price of a HOB justifies the benefits. In my case, I have 40 gallon refugiums separately plumbed on each tank.
 
I agree that they are majorly overpriced. It is definitely worth it - my old 75g wasn't reef ready, so I couldn't put one under the tank. Having a small fuge packed with macroalgae that I harvested seemed to help out in algae control a lot, as well as producing tons of pods.

Being turned off by the super high price of HOBs, I made one in the corner of my tank that worked really well. I took a small acrylic box (one of those ones used to scoop fish out of a tank, about 1/2 gal), drilled a few small holes in it for flow, and used a cleaning magnet to stick in on in the corner of my tank, with the open top about 1/4" below the water surface. I then put a mini pump in there to prevent the water from being too stagnant. Fill with rubble and macroalgae, and it was perfect and cost <$30! It was close to the lights, too, so no need to add additional lighting.
 
I agree that they are majorly overpriced. It is definitely worth it - my old 75g wasn't reef ready, so I couldn't put one under the tank. Having a small fuge packed with macroalgae that I harvested seemed to help out in algae control a lot, as well as producing tons of pods.

Being turned off by the super high price of HOBs, I made one in the corner of my tank that worked really well. I took a small acrylic box (one of those ones used to scoop fish out of a tank, about 1/2 gal), drilled a few small holes in it for flow, and used a cleaning magnet to stick in on in the corner of my tank, with the open top about 1/4" below the water surface. I then put a mini pump in there to prevent the water from being too stagnant. Fill with rubble and macroalgae, and it was perfect and cost <$30! It was close to the lights, too, so no need to add additional lighting.

Wouldn't happen to have a pic?
 
This is the best I've got...
IMG_0830-1.jpg
 
What size tank is this for.? And which model CPR are you looking at.?

While I'm not currently using a fuge ,I have before and they worked good. And the science supports the benefit of having one. The science also says bigger is better here. So look at the largest one you can.

As someone who dabbles with acrylic. I can say ,save yourself some grief and get the ready-to-go ,like CPR or whoever. Very likely cheaper than you think over the DIY and will look nice.
[I just like to tinker in the garage ,so I take the hard road.:hmm5:]
 
What size tank is this for.? And which model CPR are you looking at.?

While I'm not currently using a fuge ,I have before and they worked good. And the science supports the benefit of having one. The science also says bigger is better here. So look at the largest one you can.

As someone who dabbles with acrylic. I can say ,save yourself some grief and get the ready-to-go ,like CPR or whoever. Very likely cheaper than you think over the DIY and will look nice.
[I just like to tinker in the garage ,so I take the hard road.:hmm5:]

Looking at CPR AquaFuge2 Dimensions: 13" L x 4.5" W x 12" T for my 56g column tank.
 
Looking at CPR AquaFuge2 Dimensions: 13" L x 4.5" W x 12" T for my 56g column tank.

I bought this very same one for my 90gal. about a month ago from BRS. Are they over priced yes, as is everything in this hobby. It is very high quality and I wished I'd have bought it months earlier it does an excellent job. If you decide to go this way spend the extra $$$ and get the light.
 

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Looking at CPR AquaFuge2 Dimensions: 13" L x 4.5" W x 12" T for my 56g column tank.
I have the 56 column also and have the "regular" Aquafuge, without the skimmer. I have a rock, chaeto, and some other random macro algae that grows like crazy. Was it overpriced? I guess, but I have a great pod & mysid populations and my nitrates have been kept in check even with a well stocked tank and over feeding because I'm supplementing a mandarin. Even after five months, the mandarin is till hunting and pecking at the rocks in the DT so I'm pretty sure the fuge is providing pods to the DT for him.

Just my $0.02. HTH!

Oh, and I did splurge and get the light and the acrylic legs. I second what someone else had mentioned in that I've seen them in the classified thread forum.
 
I bought this very same one for my 90gal. about a month ago from BRS. Are they over priced yes, as is everything in this hobby. It is very high quality and I wished I'd have bought it months earlier it does an excellent job. If you decide to go this way spend the extra $$$ and get the light.

Yes, I was looking at the light set-up.

What do you keep in yours?
 
In the bottom live rubble rock about 3 inches and above that Caulerpa and Cheto algae. Is that what you were asking? You can see it in the pics I posted and the pods love this thing.
 
U can make one out of an aquaclear HOB filter. Budddman had one.

Sent from my ADR6300 using Tapatalk
 
So now that i think about this more and more, can I not use the biowheel setup?

I've been using it for waterflow and surface agitation (minus biowheel and filter cartridge). I can just buy a clip on light and stick some chaeto in there, right? Throw some pods and mysid in there too?
 
I have one and I'm truly happy with it. Overpriced... totally but the benefits are great. I don't have a sand bed, just some small rocks and couple of mushrooms. I have one small crab and three snails in it to keep it cleaned up some. I use this for my pod population. At night when the fuge light is on you can see them everywhere.
 
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