Time Committment Question for a newby

Marshall7199

New member
I first want to thank all of the contributors to Reef Central with the enticements of developing a wonderful hobby and a beautiful addition to my home. I have been ready for months and just about ready to take the plunge.
With regards to time commitment, would really like to get an idea as to what you have experienced in the initial setup stages and the time commitment once the tank is setup.
 
For me it wasn't much time. I think most of the time commitment would go into researching what you want for your tank, buying the livestock, and then testing for cycling... depending on what set up you want, actually putting the pieces together might take awhile. I have a coralife biocube so it didn't take me too long to put together (I bought a stand as well and that took forever; however, the stand is not necessary).

As for testing for cycling, I don't recall how much time that took. You'll put a lot of time into understanding what is going on in your tank, I encourage you to learn as much about that as you can. I timed how long it took me to test all of my parameters the past few days and it took me 1.7 hours (I had to repeat a couple tests). As I recall you don't need to test for everything while you're cycling your tank, so, I would say it is safe to estimate about an hour per test.
 
Your going to invest more time initially then you will in the future.

Water changes take time. As you progress, you will find easier ways, and quicker methods to mix... Etc.
Eventually you will start installing gadgets to make your job easier/faster... Such as an auto top off...
You will literally be in awe as your tank comes to life, and spend hours watching it.
As your tank matures, you will have good weeks and bad weeks. Right now I'm siphoning an algae bloom every other day. That won't last, but it's time I have to put in now.

Don't rush. Learn as much as you can. And just have fun. Just don't take on more then you can invest in it.
 
I have a 29 gallon biocube. The time commitment isn't really that much. I have two very young children at home, work long days and I can still find time to do all the upkeep I need to make sure all the tank inhabitants are well taken care of.

Early on while the tank was still early in its cycle, testing the water took about 30 minutes to get results to all the tests, but maybe 10 minutes to get each test going.

After I added fish and coral, here's a rough breakdown of my daily/weekly time commitment.

Daily Feeding: 10 minutes total each day.
Mixing Water: 5 minutes to transfer RODI into mixing container, add salt and turn on powerhead.
Water Change: 10 minutes if I'm just doing the water change, 30 minutes if I'm pulling out the media rack and skimmer and cleaning them. I do weekly water changes, weekly cleaning of the skimmer collection cup, and clean out the media rack every two weeks.
Water tests: 30 minutes a week but maybe only 10 minutes to set up tests and read results.
Misc. Work: 15 minutes extra a week.

Now if something breaks or a water test comes back with unexpected results etc. your time commitment at that moment can go way up really fast!
 
It's time well spent either good or bad. Once you get past the first few months with diatoms, cyano, and just misc crud in your tank, it gets easier from there. The two things that take the longest IMHO is water changes, and testing your water. As for testing your water, there really is no shortcuts. It just takes however long the test's take. As for water changes, there are plenty of ways to make that much faster. It is for sure a hobby to love though. I just spent almost 2k on a DSLR and macro lens just so I can take pics of my tank that cost less than that 2k. The easiest way to go about things, is stick to a water change schedule, and whatever maintennance you do, just see how long it takes you however your doing it, and keep track of it. You can then adjust from there to figure out ways to speed up the process. If able, get 2 brute trash cans. 1 for rodi, 1 for saltwater mixing. You can fill them both and already have the water ready for a whole month of water changes/top offs, longer depending on tank size. Then you just gotta move the water from the can to the tank. There are also many simple things you can do to save time. Getting lights that have a timer, or putting them on a timer, ATO which was already mentioned, etc. The first few months are for sure the worst, but for the most part after that, you just gotta keep up with water changing, cleaning the glass, and feeding the fish.
 
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Time spent in hobby is way better than time spent in bars, clubs etc.
Money spent on fish is way better than money spent on cigarettes, booze etc.
 
My .02

1. Planning stage - 24/7 thinking excitedly about your new tank.
2. Build stage - as much as you can without losing your job/marriage
3. First Water/Cycling - 20 minutes daily waiting for ammonia to get to zero.
4. First livestock - 20 minutes a day feeding watching, plus an hour or so a week on cleaning water mixing, making newbie mistakes.
5. 3 month mark - 20 minutes daily feeding, 2 hours maintenance, water mix and testing weekly, plus endless hours enjoying your investment
6. 6 months - 1 year - same as above, but now you figure out shortcuts and start planning your upgrade - See step 1.

Repeat until you have too many tanks or you enter Reefers Anonymous :thumbsup:
 
This is a really good question. If you look through for sale adds (once you qualify) you'll notice a common theme between all of the "getting out of the hobby" and "tank tear down" ads. That theme is generally "too busy", "don't have the time", or "life got in the way". By considering this aspect of the hobby I think you are ahead of the curve.

As far as the time commitment goes itself once the tank is set up, it completely depends on the individual system, the resources you have available, and what your goals are. You could literally get away with spending no time on a tank by hiring a maintenance company or spending 1-2 hours a day on maintenance and anywhere in between. It all depends on how deep you jump in. My advice would be to reasonably think about your life and how much free time you can dedicate to a reef. If its only a little, stay on the smaller side and keep only fish and corals that are considered easy. Establish a routine with regards to water changes, and testing.
For me personally I have found I don't really enjoy maintenance, so for the current tank I'm building I'm going with softies only to eliminate 3 tests and dosing. I plumbed the tank to a drain, my rodi unit is plumbed to a mixing station which is plumbed to my tank. By establishing my goal as "as little maintenance as possible" I built a system around it that I can do a water change in about 2 minutes using a ball valve and my iPhone. Testing for me will only consist of nitrates and SG once the thing is established. SO my current time commitment to my tank is probably about 30 minutes a week which mostly includes feeding and cleaning the glass.
 
My current systems consist of a 120g DT/40b sump mostly SPS reef and a 150DT/120refugium/50 sump that is used as a frag tank at the moment. I test the water about monthly, that takes about 15 minutes to do both. I then do water changes the next day, that takes me a couple hours for both systems combined. Feeding takes all of 5 minutes daily. Tank watching can be anywhere from 0 to all day depending on what new things I find.

As mentioned in the above posts, starting out it will take a fair amount of time until things get well established and you develop a routine. Because I've been at it for over 25 years now, I sorta have most things down , but even so, every once in awhile, something happens and I'm at it until I'm done, whether it's a couple extra hours or a couple extra days.
 
Once you have your tank up and running, plan to spend about 1-2 hours per week taking care of it. This does not include mixing salt water, which involves filling a container with water, adding salt and turning on a power-head or pump of some sort. It's really only about 5-10 minutes of actual work to prepare water. Time to change water depends on the size of your tank.
 
Thanks everyone for the thoughtful comments.
mcozad829 - I to share your same vision - but not because I would dislike the maintance but because I do not want to start something that I can not keep running smoothly with the amount of travel I do. My gut was telling me that the time factor is really dependent upon the setup. Thad for the words of wisdom.
kmbyrnes - I am glad I am not the only one planning 24/7
whosurcaddi- H2O water auto water charge is on my hit list. Thanks for the comment to peruse this once I get it established.
stingeragent- Thanks. I have been searching for a way to minimize water changes to one every few months but it appears that this is a maintenance task that can not be avoided. I am in the municipal waste water industry and coming up with a way to filter/treat to minimize adding new water is an interest of mine.
And thanks to the others that commented.
 
Marshall7199 I am trying get my 350 built. Got to spend about 5 hours today plumbing. It will likely get wet next weekend.
I spend lots of time thinking, planning and dreaming.
This is my 4th tank and I STILL am excited about every aspect of this hobby.
 
being busy is one thing. being away is another. do you have someone to look after the tank while your away? my advice is if you can't devote the time to do it the right way, choose another hobby until you can.
 
One way to gauge this:

If you are currently way behind on household chores, repairs & maintenance or feel other obligations are suffering because of a lack of time, long work hours, travel or unkept commitments, you may want to postpone a SW tank. Having a enthusiastic competent person at home who is willing to help may make all the difference however.
 
Thanks again for the comments. Pushing forward with research, getting new carpet laid in a few weeks, then will begin making progress as a winter project.
 
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