Please forgive my newness to this hobby, but I have some questions that I guess I need answered before I buy anything larger and am hoping you guys can help me.
I have been doing so much reading online, but there is a ton of conflicting information regarding reef tanks.
My goal is to have mostly a reef tank. I love the coral and the "live" aspect of live rock and sand. So here are my questions:
With a reef system, there are sites that say that you only need a protein skimmer and lots of flow to keep it healthy and other sites say that you need a sump with overflow and lots of flow (these are the "reef ready" types of aquariums?). (AquariumPros.com is what has me so confused, and the search function isn't working right now on RC)
With a tank that has an overflow, your pre-filter is built into that part right? (thats the black section at the back of the tank?) and the sump is the pump which sucks the water in and sends it back into the tank, right? So the sump is the best way to go because it causes a much higher rate of flow that say an HOB or just a few powerheads and a skimmer, right? Does the sump actually filter anything, or is it strictly a pump? I keep thinking back to my house sump and all it did was pump water.
The skimmer would be a definite for me anyway, because I still want that crap pulled out of my tank that the pre-filter doesn't get. Is the pre-filter just a sponge/floss, or does it contain any charcoal or anything else that is chemical based?
Now with a FOWLR or FO, the wet/dry or bio-ball filtration is good because the media (balls or LR pieces) acts as the filter and pulls the nitrates out of the water, right? But in a reef, there is an overload and the balls become fatal, right?
Ok, I am sure there is more that I need to understand, but this is a good start for me. I am not going to buy anything until I "get" the whole concept.
This is so much different than FW!
I just finished reading: http://www.masla.com/reeftheory.html
Now I am more confused, which method have you all found is better/best? According to that article, I would be using the live sand method, but it doesn't appear to have any filtration at all. Or the Standard method, which calls for an overflow, but uses bioballs.....
I have been doing so much reading online, but there is a ton of conflicting information regarding reef tanks.
My goal is to have mostly a reef tank. I love the coral and the "live" aspect of live rock and sand. So here are my questions:
With a reef system, there are sites that say that you only need a protein skimmer and lots of flow to keep it healthy and other sites say that you need a sump with overflow and lots of flow (these are the "reef ready" types of aquariums?). (AquariumPros.com is what has me so confused, and the search function isn't working right now on RC)
With a tank that has an overflow, your pre-filter is built into that part right? (thats the black section at the back of the tank?) and the sump is the pump which sucks the water in and sends it back into the tank, right? So the sump is the best way to go because it causes a much higher rate of flow that say an HOB or just a few powerheads and a skimmer, right? Does the sump actually filter anything, or is it strictly a pump? I keep thinking back to my house sump and all it did was pump water.
The skimmer would be a definite for me anyway, because I still want that crap pulled out of my tank that the pre-filter doesn't get. Is the pre-filter just a sponge/floss, or does it contain any charcoal or anything else that is chemical based?
Now with a FOWLR or FO, the wet/dry or bio-ball filtration is good because the media (balls or LR pieces) acts as the filter and pulls the nitrates out of the water, right? But in a reef, there is an overload and the balls become fatal, right?
Ok, I am sure there is more that I need to understand, but this is a good start for me. I am not going to buy anything until I "get" the whole concept.
This is so much different than FW!
I just finished reading: http://www.masla.com/reeftheory.html
Now I am more confused, which method have you all found is better/best? According to that article, I would be using the live sand method, but it doesn't appear to have any filtration at all. Or the Standard method, which calls for an overflow, but uses bioballs.....