start out right

joedirt54

New member
I would, after a number a failed/great reefs, offer some basic info for new reefers:

First: read all you can before you buy anything. Buy all the quality used equipment you can find.

Second: start with a good RO/DI unit and a good quality salt mix like IO.

Third: read more!

Fourth: light every 2' of reef with a 150w DE Metal Halide or 250w(if your thinking of SPS, or your tank is 20" or deeper). Mix with t-5's for the look you want and the corals you might keep.

Fifth: only dose what you test for!!!! Get a good quality DkH test kit and a good 2-part ca++/alk supplement like b-ionic...test and keep your dkh ~10.

Sixth: provide a good and varied flow of water around your reef to remove wastes and suspend detrius for the skimmer to take care of.

Seventh: Buy the best skimmer and live rock you can afford. Skip all sand/ substrate at this point.

Eighth: Keep you hands clean and out of the tank as much as possible...use gloves, rinse them, and only move things after much thought.

Ninth: only buy corals and fish you know about...if you can't understand it's needs at the store you will rarely figure it out at home.

Tenth: Save a reef: buy, sell, and trade as many corals as you can...third and fourth generation corals are common and are much more adapt to live in your captive reef.


These are my ten tips: good quality source water and salt mix, un-ending search for infomation, simple DE Metal Halide/ t-5 lighting, quality live rock and skimmer, no sand or gravel, good- varied flow, and a understanding of each and every critter you buy.

Next master temp and SG control with auto-top off and dual stage temp controller.

You are now ready to advance to the unique problems of a mature reef...good luck.

Dirt
 
15 views no posts...I realize now , this is a holly-s h i t, I just paid $3000, my whole tank is green-what do I now, forum...Sorry.

The only hope here is that a few that listened too much and spent too much at the LFS might just have enough success, interest to continue the right way.
 
yeah, a little too late my friend :o)

A lot of these things, I'm ok with. Some I could use a do-over. Although I have been lucky with my tank so far, it's beautiful!
 
ah, some who have come here for guidance will hopefully follow the slow and steady, buy good equipment the first time, and no you can't put a yellow tang in a 10g nano method :D
 
It's like I had things 20% right on my first 20H, 75% on my 75gal and now close to 95% on my current reef. Getting the basics down is so important to keeping a reef long term...I have not lost a coral or had any algae problems over the last year running my tanks as high as 10w/gal of light(I was running a 10gal for a year with a 150w MH).
 
No yellow tang in my 10g nano??? Hmmm how about a hippo??? lol.

Joedirt, I hear you. I started out with a 29 and every mistake taught me something that I could use when setting up my 46. Each mistake there has taught me something I've used when setting up my 75...lol. Maybe by the time I get up to a 500, I'll have learned to learn more BEFORE making mistakes...but I doubt it!!
 
I would change "buy the best liverock you can afford" to "Find the best liverock you can, preferably from a running tank in your area." Or something to that effect. I have a fish store that charges 7.99 a pound but I got all my LR of craigslist from local reefer s that are re doing their tank or getting out all together price $3 - $4.50.

Price != quality. Tell the newbies what they need to look for.
 
But no sand? Sand is a personal preference, and I dont think you should convince newbies to not get it. You can tell them the advantages/disadvantages of bb to dsb, but dont make it out to be a bad thing.
 
I think the point here is: It is easier (and cheaper) to learn from someone else's mistakes than from your own.
 
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