I am looking to do something for my office and have some questions.
Is the stock lighting sufficient for corals?
It looks like it has some type of built in filter. Are you planning on running anything else on it? Protein skimmer?
3 watts of light per gallon should be more than sufficient for lower light corals. I am successfully growing a clam and a bunch of SPS in my 3.75w/gal 28.
The tank comes with a small HOB filter, I don't have any plans to change it or run a skimmer at this time. I only plan on very easy to keep soft corals (zoas, rics, xenia, gsp) that will be fragged from my big tank and a very small bioload. Weekly 0.5gal water changes should keep everything in line.
3 watts of light per gallon should be more than sufficient for lower light corals. I am successfully growing a clam and a bunch of SPS in my 3.75w/gal 28.
The tank comes with a small HOB filter, I don't have any plans to change it or run a skimmer at this time. I only plan on very easy to keep soft corals (zoas, rics, xenia, gsp) that will be fragged from my big tank and a very small bioload. Weekly 0.5gal water changes should keep everything in line.
Wow - SPS and clams with less than 4 WPG? I've been told that my tank couldn't have hard coral with an 8 WPG light. :spin2:
The stock Picotope light isn't very good. In addition to only being 9 watts, it has nothing protecting the bulb, so salt creep and rust end up being a problem really quickly. I'm quite happy (as are my corals) with my 24w Odyssea PC. It's cheap ($30) and comes with a nice 50/50 bulb. I'm growing SPS at the bottom of the tank with it. You don't need to upgrade the light now, but it's something to consider.
What plans do you have for inverts and fish? Just curious.![]()
Cool little tank. I would probably just leave a 1 gallon bottle of RO water inside my desk for easy top off.
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