Looking great very nice location for the tank
Thanks! It used to be a bar, unfortunately I lost my "before pictures" when I washed my phone. Quite the transformation.
This room is going to be our family room/Rec room/bar. It's going to be perfect!
Looking great very nice location for the tank
WOW looks great!!! Wish it was mine.... Oh wait it is mine"ours".
One of the parts I've been looking forward to is pluming and it's about to start! Let's see how much I like plumbing by the time I'm done. I ordered a bunch of goodies the other day and no plans for the weekend coming up. I'm still looking for a little advice on the beananimal overflow. I have a post in lighting and filtration section if anyone want to check that out I would appreciate some help. I'm not sure how to post a link to it from my phone or I would.
Looking great! You'll be sliding the tank in before you know it!
Finally can say it's in place. Now let the plumbing begin.
Terrific progress. Lots of top of the line gear. Very cool that you two are both so into it. My wife likes the tank, but shes not addicted like I am, I am trying to decide if that is a bad thing or a good thing!
Keep up the awesome work, I look forward to seeing the finished product.
Most people have a low level of phosphate even at the best of times, so they are always running a GFO reactor. People are usually trying to keep their levels in the 0.01-0.1 ppm range. A tank with no phosphate can be just as unhealthy as a tank with too much, so you need to continue with water tests to see whether you need to run it, or how much you need to run it.
It can be difficult to tell where phosphate is coming from. Sometimes it is coming from the rock or substrate, but this usually disappears gradually over time. More often it is imported as a part of fish and coral foods. Remember, some phosphate is required, just not too much. Too much food can cause increased phosphate levels. Also, to much detritus piling up in the display or sump can cause phosphate levels to rise.
Extra phosphate may also be introduced in a bad batch or cheaper brand of salt. Many people test a new batch of salt water after mixing but before doing water changes.
There are lots of good articles about phosphate in the aquarium. Do a Google on "phosphate reefkeeping" to see more.
Dave.M
I hope you didn't buy too much live sand as it is generally full of a lot of sediments you don't need. Live sand is good for seeding the rest of the substrate but you could do the rest in dry sand that you have pre-rinsed well.
Dave.M
Great. How many pounds did you use?
I would suggest if you've already bought the sand you might as well use it, but go through it looking for debris. Keep some for seeding bacteria (25%) and rinse the rest out before use.
Dave.M