My new 600 gallon reef

Status
Not open for further replies.
nice pics triggerfish! tank is coming along goodwin! i really need to spend more time on this site to see whats going on.

-Justin
 
Have you thought of hooking this tank in with your old ones? Personally, I would, for the added volume and the fact that your tank would be long established within a few hours of work instead of more years of work.
 
Have you thought of hooking this tank in with your old ones? Personally, I would, for the added volume and the fact that your tank would be long established within a few hours of work instead of more years of work.
 
Have you thought of hooking this tank in with your old ones? Personally, I would, for the added volume and the fact that your tank would be long established within a few hours of work instead of more years of work.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=9145963#post9145963 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by three-spot
Have you thought of hooking this tank in with your old ones? Personally, I would, for the added volume and the fact that your tank would be long established within a few hours of work instead of more years of work.
My tanks are located in different rooms, so connecting them would be a major project. I did take 100 gallons from the 470 to set up the new tank. Not sure if that is going to make a difference. Will have to wait to see how things cycle.
 
The lights are finally up. Not the neatest job, but they are still hanging and will have to adjust them later on. Make the tank look a heck of a lot different with some light on it.

LIGHTSHUNG1.jpg


LEFTSIDE.jpg


CENTER.jpg


RIGHTSIDE2.jpg
 
Great looking project!

Do you happen to know the type of steel used for the stand? Dimensions and thickness?
 
Finally got the calcium reactor put together and running along with the phosban reactor & sand filters.

CR.jpg


sandphos.jpg
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=9150776#post9150776 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Pico Keeper
Love everything so far!!! Can't wait to see it in a few years!

Love the depth of the tank and the aquascape!! Props!
Thank you! I can't wait to see it with fish & corals. I really like the depth also. I can see now that to maintain the look, the back wall is going to have to be kept clean of coralline algae.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=9151856#post9151856 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by quy_nquyen
i love the island look!
The more that I look at the tank, the more I am liking the look. Main reason for the rockwork was to keep the majority located under the MH pendants for the corals. This look is quite different from my other tanks. Lot more caves and plateaus.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=9162913#post9162913 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by clekchau
the aquascaping is fantastic. where did you get the base rock?
Live rock came from exoticfish.com in CA.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=9130907#post9130907 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by triggerfish1976
Here are pics of my tank with the Lumen Max reflectors.

Thanks for sharing the pictures, Your tank looks awsome! I hope that mine will turn out looking that good.
 
goodwin9. i looked in your gallery and WOW! an octopus. i've never seen one in a private tank. will he outgrow the tank??

also, your previous tank shows a skimmer installed into the corner. how was the performance of the skimmer at that location compared to others that you may have tried?
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=9188382#post9188382 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by chainsaw5vent
goodwin9. i looked in your gallery and WOW! an octopus. i've never seen one in a private tank. will he outgrow the tank??

also, your previous tank shows a skimmer installed into the corner. how was the performance of the skimmer at that location compared to others that you may have tried?

My octopus should only grow to a mantle size of 7 or 8 inches with a 2 to 3 foot leg span, so I don't think he will out grow. I'm not sure which picture of the skimmer that you are referring to, but on my smaller tanks, (220 gal or less) the skimmers are hang on, or internal skimmer located at the sumps. They seem to do a good job. My two largest tanks use external skimmers which do a fantastic job. They are a much bigger skimmer and considerably more expensive so I assume that they should be a better job in skimming. From my experiences, I believe that an external skimmer works better, and skims a little better than the hang on, or internal skimmers. If I were to build another tank today, I would go with an external skimmer hands down.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top