New 55gal

saltynewbie904

New member
Good evening,

I am starting a 55 gal aquarium this weekend. I wanted to ask a question and this may turn into a bunch of questions. So, I want to say thank you to everyone in advance. So far I have had nothing but great advice from this community.

Question 1 of probably a million lol!

1. If I setup the 55gal slowly with just mixing salt water, adding live sand, and adding a filter with no rock or anything else, will the tank cycle without the rock?
 
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Salty, welcome to RC. The answer to your question. No. Beneficial bacteria does not live in the water column. It's must have a substrate to inhibit, may it be rock, sand or filter medium. The last would be a very weak method. It would not work for your size of tank. The filter would not alone be able to handle the smallest of livestock. Have you read the section on setting up a tank? It's full of useful info. Wish you luck and happy reefing.
 
Live Rock

Live Rock

This stuff is expensive!! I don't see myself buying 100 lbs of live rock at close to 700 dollars to start.

Can I gradually add rocks to it and let it just run until I get everything built up?
 
Good evening,

I am starting a 55 gal aquarium this weekend. I wanted to ask a question and this may turn into a bunch of questions. So, I want to say thank you to everyone in advance. So far I have had nothing but great advice from this community.

Question 1 of probably a million lol!

1. If I setup the 55gal slowly with just mixing salt water, adding live sand, and adding a filter with no rock or anything else, will the tank cycle without the rock?

Straight forward answer, yes. Cycling is the term describing the growth of bacteria, enough to sustain life. Now straightforwardly, yes, your tank will cycle. You have sand in there, and bacteria will live in it. They will also live in your filter, and basically any surface possible.

Long answer though, there may not be enough bacteria to take on your tank - at least not easily.

There are ways around having to use live rock though. So long as you have biological filtration, then your tank can, and will cycle. This means that biological filter media such as bioballs or ceramic noodles, for example, are possible.

I would personally suggest Marine Pure, a product in the market that can sustain large, large, large amounts of bacteria. The biggest block you can get (it's sold in the forms of balls, tiles and blocks) is more than enough to filter your 55g, and it's actually only 8'x8'x4'.

There is an issue regardless though, if you add live rock later on.

Cycling is designed to produce enough bacteria to break down the general load of organic erm, stuff.

However, live rock can and do have die-off, sometimes more so than the current bacteria load can handle (even after cycling), which initiates another cycle. Depending on the amount of die-off, it can take a while, and depending on how much die-off there is, it can occur each time you add live rock. Or rather, each time you add live rock, you can end up raising ammonia and stuff enough to kill your fish and corals.

So it's good to add your live rock in beforehand.

Of course, that doesn't mean there's no way around it. Most people use cured rock, which is basically cycled rock, to add to their tanks. Others use base rock, or 'not-live rock', which will not have any die-off.

And... yeah. :)
 
One box of thishttp://www.amazon.com/Carib-Sea-ACS00370-Aquarium-40-Pound/dp/B0017JBX7M/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1415939018&sr=8-1&keywords=carib+sea+base+rock is all you need to get your aquarium cycled. Its not expensive if you use dry rock. I would personally buy two boxes and cherry pick the best pieces from each box. That's only 150$.

An old picture of my tank with this rock just after the cycle.

j7NguA2AOv8vc.jpg
 
Not all rock is created the same. If you look at Whosurcaddie's photo you will see it is very porous and light. That is what you want. The more porous it is the more bacterial colonies can live on and within the rock. Since it is lighter you can have less than the 2lb/gallon rule of thumb floating around out there and have more surface area.
 
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