A tank large enough for the species I want to keep...right now.
medium-grain sand [fine blows like mad] and a lot of gnarly rock
a wavemaker
A sump large enough to hold:
a return pump that can really move the water
The best heater I can get---cheap and used is dangerous. Plus a digital thermometer for the dt.
An ATO with reservoir: I use kalk in the reservoir, and an Eheim pump is the only one I've yet found that lasts [kalk is abrasive.]
A skimmer that produces foam as thick as egg meringue, so thick it can stand on its own.
Room for spare rock: needs change, corals may need to have a bit glued to them for stability. So a reserve rubble pile is great.
A light that can reach the bottom of my tank: I'm using LEDs. The tank is 30" deep.
a water alarm (against leaks)
spare buckets and towels...because.
A refractometer
Tests and matching supplements for: alkalinity, calcium, magnesium; and kalk; also tests for nitrate and ammonia. Actually I keep Tetra multitest pool strips for the koi pond, and they're fast and a pretty good indicator. You want the real news, get a nicer test kit, but the strips actually aren't bad, if you know what you're looking at.
enough salt on hand to handle my entire water volume, if I had to. Never run out.
qt tank with its own heater, its own ato, and jump protection. Stuff you can sterilize.
filter socks for when I need them. Rarely. {my thing is lps]
more towels.
hose, plumbing parts, bits of filter, old nets---in decades of this hobby, you build up quite a collection.
A jug of white vinegar for soaking pumps and parts.
This is what my collection looks like.
medium-grain sand [fine blows like mad] and a lot of gnarly rock
a wavemaker
A sump large enough to hold:
a return pump that can really move the water
The best heater I can get---cheap and used is dangerous. Plus a digital thermometer for the dt.
An ATO with reservoir: I use kalk in the reservoir, and an Eheim pump is the only one I've yet found that lasts [kalk is abrasive.]
A skimmer that produces foam as thick as egg meringue, so thick it can stand on its own.
Room for spare rock: needs change, corals may need to have a bit glued to them for stability. So a reserve rubble pile is great.
A light that can reach the bottom of my tank: I'm using LEDs. The tank is 30" deep.
a water alarm (against leaks)
spare buckets and towels...because.
A refractometer
Tests and matching supplements for: alkalinity, calcium, magnesium; and kalk; also tests for nitrate and ammonia. Actually I keep Tetra multitest pool strips for the koi pond, and they're fast and a pretty good indicator. You want the real news, get a nicer test kit, but the strips actually aren't bad, if you know what you're looking at.
enough salt on hand to handle my entire water volume, if I had to. Never run out.
qt tank with its own heater, its own ato, and jump protection. Stuff you can sterilize.
filter socks for when I need them. Rarely. {my thing is lps]
more towels.
hose, plumbing parts, bits of filter, old nets---in decades of this hobby, you build up quite a collection.
A jug of white vinegar for soaking pumps and parts.
This is what my collection looks like.