New to Reef Central

New2salt000

New member
Whats up Reef Central!!! The names Ken and ive been keeping fish pretty much my entire life off and on. Currently running over 400 gallons of fresh water large aggressive fish. Everything from arrowanna to silver dollars, oscars to wolf fish, Datnoides to puffers and everything in between. I figured it was time to get into saltwater and started doing some homework. Lots and lots of reading and watching vids on youtube. I had a 45 gallon saltwater tank many many years ago. The time when power heads ontop of an undergravel filter, with some crushed puka shells for substrate was the thing lol, man have times changed. Gotta say its a little over whelming with equiptment, lighting and controllers. Sps, lps softies fish....it goes on and on. So havent truely decided which direction im going, just that i need to have a saltwater tank. I figured if i cant learn from the community here, i cant learn anywhere. So as i dive into the hobby both feet first, i very much look.forward to getting to know yall over here, and try to make this as painless.as possible.

Ken
New2Salt000
 
Welcome..

My best suggestions are....Do your homework and ensure you understand the reasons for peoples recommendations and realize that there are quite a few who don't know what they are talking about..
There is very little you need to have a successful tank..
One can have a successful tank with the following
1-tank
2-saltwater
3-rock (surface area for bacteria)
4-heater
5-powerhead
6-lights

Things like skimmers, reactors, fuge, sumps, fancy controllers,etc.. are all optional..

The bacteria is your biggest friend in a tank.. It does most of the work..
 
Welcome!
Understand your inhabitants, be able to consistently produce and maintain perfect RODI water with a TDS less than 5, on point to NSW, have great light, heat and most of all have fun!
 
Welcome!

There are a lot of great folks on here and a wealth of knowledge. Myself I have none,:wildone:

The advice I'll pass on.... Have Patience, Its the most important part in the SW hobby.

Best part have fun and enjoy!
 
Rule No. 1 - NOTHING happens fast in this hobbie... except trouble, disappointment, and heartbreak.

<img src="/images/welcome.gif" width="500" height="62"><br><b><i><big><big>To Reef Central</b></i></big></big>
 
Welcome to reef central! I am not one of those with a vast knowledge of reefkeeping, but what I do know i'll gladly pass on! :-)
 
Welcome..

My best suggestions are....Do your homework and ensure you understand the reasons for peoples recommendations and realize that there are quite a few who don't know what they are talking about..
There is very little you need to have a successful tank..
One can have a successful tank with the following
1-tank
2-saltwater
3-rock (surface area for bacteria)
4-heater
5-powerhead
6-lights

Things like skimmers, reactors, fuge, sumps, fancy controllers,etc.. are all optional..

The bacteria is your biggest friend in a tank.. It does most of the work..

Thanks for the welcome and the advice. For now gonna try and keep things as simple as possible, lots of biomedia, sump, and protien slimmer
 
Rule No. 1 - NOTHING happens fast in this hobbie... except trouble, disappointment, and heartbreak.

<img src="/images/welcome.gif" width="500" height="62"><br><b><i><big><big>To Reef Central</b></i></big></big>
Slow and steady wins the race, not in a rush for sure. Still have a ton to learn and fogure out before water goes in a tank. Thanks for the welcome
 
Welcome!

There are a lot of great folks on here and a wealth of knowledge. Myself I have none,:wildone:

The advice I'll pass on.... Have Patience, Its the most important part in the SW hobby.

Best part have fun and enjoy!
If i can gain a little more im the patience dept it should be fine. The community here is huge so hopefully i cam to the right place to learn
 
Montgomery NY... Thats downstate?

If you scroll down the page to the reef club forums, look up upstate reef society.
 
There are two rules to reefing
#1. Take things slow.
#2. gol even slower than you thought rule 1 meant.

Dont dive into the deep end. Get a feel for the pool in the shallow end. Get the biggest tank you think you will ever want. You are almost certainly want to upgrade from whatever you get. I went from 40 to 90 and now 180. MY walls aren't long enough to support anything longer and I have check to see if I could squeeze in a 8' tank.

You might want to consider an AquaClear 70 HOB filter. Doesn't really do much for filtering but you can run carbon in it and it helps with gas exchange and will take out some detritus.
 
Montgomery NY... Thats downstate?

If you scroll down the page to the reef club forums, look up upstate reef society.

Yeah im downstate, about an hour or so south of albany. Been wondering if there was any groups or clubs within a reasonable distanve from me. For me.its much easier to learn from people as oppossed to just reading something.
 
There are two rules to reefing
#1. Take things slow.
#2. gol even slower than you thought rule 1 meant.

Dont dive into the deep end. Get a feel for the pool in the shallow end. Get the biggest tank you think you will ever want. You are almost certainly want to upgrade from whatever you get. I went from 40 to 90 and now 180. MY walls aren't long enough to support anything longer and I have check to see if I could squeeze in a 8' tank.
Thanks gary, time is what i have lots of, its gonna take time.to get the equipment im gonna need for this switch over.

You might want to consider an AquaClear 70 HOB filter. Doesn't really do much for filtering but you can run carbon in it and it helps with gas exchange and will take out some detritus.
 
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