goldmaniac
New member
Who else has success with simple systems, and what do you have in the tank?
I'm currently reading a thread called "Devistating Tank Tragedy" where an experienced reefer lost the majority of corals and animals due to a bad component on a calcium reactor, and Alk went up to 28 (28!!!). It's a total shame and I truly feel bad for the person.
BUT
it has dawned on me that this is the main reason why I keep my mixed reef tank insanely simple, to the point that people get angry and post "you can't do that."
I think that 'Failure of Equipment' is the biggest danger, or rather risk, in this hobby.
Not bad testing
not lazy husbandry
not bad luck
not disease
not pests
not stupid tank babysitters
it's my opinion that equipment, especially complicated equipment such as a calcium reactor, that can cause the biggest Total Trajedys so quickly and easily.
for this reason, and because I'm not smart and just a bit lazy, I keep it offensively simple.
Who else has success with simple systems, and what do you have in the tank?
I'll start:
120 gallon 48" x 24" x 24" AGA display tank, with a 50 gallon, 3 section sump/refugium.
1st section: dual 100 micron filter socks from an external overflow.
this rolls into
2nd section: 16x24 footprint of a refugium, with 2 inches of sugar-sized sand. Caulerpa prolifera, grape caulerpa, and chaeto in the fuge, with two $12 6500k flood lights on reverse timing to the display tank. Thanks to Melev for his lighting suggestion on his web site.
this rolls into
3rd section: dual ViaAqua 4900 pumps. Each of these has a SCWD, and this results in four return lines, alternating, creating random flow (the two SCWDs don't alternate at the same rate as each other, so flow combinations from the 2 pairs of returns are random).
I also have (2) Koralia 4's in the tank for flow.
I rarely dose with 2-part from BulkReefSupply, but i have it just in case.
I use Red Sea Coral Pro salt. my LFS sells a 5-gallon bucket for $40 and that is said to be good for 175 gallons of Salt water.
I made about 90% of the live rock in the tank about 2 years ago, i'd call it a Medium amount of live rock in the tank. You can click my home page to see how much, actually.
lighting is a 48" Nova Extreme Pro canopy of 8 t5's, each being 54 or 56 watts, I forget. two Home Depot timers handle 4 of the lights each.
That's it.
No Skimmer at all
no calcium reactor
no reactors at all, actually
no GFO
no carbon
no chemicals
no UV
no anything else
I do water changes pretty randomly. when I hooked up my Kent Maxxima Hi-S RO/DI and fill up 24 5-gallon buckets and a couple of 32-gallon Rubbermaid trash cans to store ro/di water, I did two separate 45 gallon water changes about a week apart recently. I probably won't do another until mid-January, at least.
My mixed reef:
SPS: multiple types of acroporas, milleporas, montiporas, gorgonias, seriotomas (sp? birds nest corals)
LPS: one large frogspawn with about 6 heads
Softies: kenya tree corals, toadstools
Mushrooms: ricordia floridas and ricordia yumas, about 4 specimes of each, various sizes
polyps: button polyps, and about 20 kinds of zoas/palys
Fish: 2 tangs, a freckled hawkfish, 3 perculas, a Rainford's goby, spotted mandarinfish, bangaii cardinalfish.
my tank will never get TOTM, but i have a family with small kids and this 170 gallon system is VERY LOW maintenance. I'm happy with what I have.
I change filter socks about twice a week
I clean the glass about once a week
I trim the macroalgae about once every 3 months
I clean the pumps about once a year
I clean the overflow about once a NEVER
I test water quality about once a oh-crap-its-been-way-too-long
Anyone else?
I'm currently reading a thread called "Devistating Tank Tragedy" where an experienced reefer lost the majority of corals and animals due to a bad component on a calcium reactor, and Alk went up to 28 (28!!!). It's a total shame and I truly feel bad for the person.
BUT
it has dawned on me that this is the main reason why I keep my mixed reef tank insanely simple, to the point that people get angry and post "you can't do that."
I think that 'Failure of Equipment' is the biggest danger, or rather risk, in this hobby.
Not bad testing
not lazy husbandry
not bad luck
not disease
not pests
not stupid tank babysitters
it's my opinion that equipment, especially complicated equipment such as a calcium reactor, that can cause the biggest Total Trajedys so quickly and easily.
for this reason, and because I'm not smart and just a bit lazy, I keep it offensively simple.
Who else has success with simple systems, and what do you have in the tank?
I'll start:
120 gallon 48" x 24" x 24" AGA display tank, with a 50 gallon, 3 section sump/refugium.
1st section: dual 100 micron filter socks from an external overflow.
this rolls into
2nd section: 16x24 footprint of a refugium, with 2 inches of sugar-sized sand. Caulerpa prolifera, grape caulerpa, and chaeto in the fuge, with two $12 6500k flood lights on reverse timing to the display tank. Thanks to Melev for his lighting suggestion on his web site.
this rolls into
3rd section: dual ViaAqua 4900 pumps. Each of these has a SCWD, and this results in four return lines, alternating, creating random flow (the two SCWDs don't alternate at the same rate as each other, so flow combinations from the 2 pairs of returns are random).
I also have (2) Koralia 4's in the tank for flow.
I rarely dose with 2-part from BulkReefSupply, but i have it just in case.
I use Red Sea Coral Pro salt. my LFS sells a 5-gallon bucket for $40 and that is said to be good for 175 gallons of Salt water.
I made about 90% of the live rock in the tank about 2 years ago, i'd call it a Medium amount of live rock in the tank. You can click my home page to see how much, actually.
lighting is a 48" Nova Extreme Pro canopy of 8 t5's, each being 54 or 56 watts, I forget. two Home Depot timers handle 4 of the lights each.
That's it.
No Skimmer at all
no calcium reactor
no reactors at all, actually
no GFO
no carbon
no chemicals
no UV
no anything else
I do water changes pretty randomly. when I hooked up my Kent Maxxima Hi-S RO/DI and fill up 24 5-gallon buckets and a couple of 32-gallon Rubbermaid trash cans to store ro/di water, I did two separate 45 gallon water changes about a week apart recently. I probably won't do another until mid-January, at least.
My mixed reef:
SPS: multiple types of acroporas, milleporas, montiporas, gorgonias, seriotomas (sp? birds nest corals)
LPS: one large frogspawn with about 6 heads
Softies: kenya tree corals, toadstools
Mushrooms: ricordia floridas and ricordia yumas, about 4 specimes of each, various sizes
polyps: button polyps, and about 20 kinds of zoas/palys
Fish: 2 tangs, a freckled hawkfish, 3 perculas, a Rainford's goby, spotted mandarinfish, bangaii cardinalfish.
my tank will never get TOTM, but i have a family with small kids and this 170 gallon system is VERY LOW maintenance. I'm happy with what I have.
I change filter socks about twice a week
I clean the glass about once a week
I trim the macroalgae about once every 3 months
I clean the pumps about once a year
I clean the overflow about once a NEVER
I test water quality about once a oh-crap-its-been-way-too-long
Anyone else?