Would this work?

GoogleEyes

New member
Im thinking of doin a small tank for my son. I am thinking a 10 gallon with one large center piece of live rock. An aquaclear HOB just to soak up some bacteria and possible run to carbon. A small hydor for some circulation. A ai prime pennet mabe for light. (Some suggetions on that light would be nice. Anyways the centerpiece being a toadstool or possible a frogspawn. You opions please!
 
I like it! That may be a lot more light than you need. :lol:

You could even add a firefish and a shrimp to that tank. Or maybe a goby and pisitl shrimp pair.
 
I would get a 20 long because the parameters would be more stable. Otherwise, you seem in pretty good shape.
 
The bigger question is: what kind of livestock do you want?
Are you thinking coral only or are you wanting fish too? Make that decision now and save yourself a lot of heartache later.
(And jraker is correct, larger is easier in some ways since you have more water to absorb any changes that might occur.)
It's a great hobby and could be a wonderful learning experience, but it wont be as easy as simply adding some saltwater, a HOB filter and some lighting.
 
Not much difference in 10g or 20g as far as stability goes. Basically boils down to if you want any fish or not. Two small nano fish would work in a 10g and no more, in a 20g you could do a few more depending on what you want. If the tank is just for a coral or two the 10g will be fine
 
Mabe a clown and small goby that's it for fish just mainly a leather type coral so that mabe, just mabe, we could see it hosting. Then mabe a 10% water change weekly. He wants an bubble tip but I don't feel like the headaches
 
Mabe a clown and small goby that's it for fish just mainly a leather type coral so that mabe, just mabe, we could see it hosting. Then mabe a 10% water change weekly. He wants an bubble tip but I don't feel like the headaches

Bubble tip will be too large IMHO for a 10 gallon.
You could do just the clowfish, by himself, thats it fishwise if you went that direction.
 
Go slow. Add the coral first after the cycle, then a fish a couple of weeks later. 10gal is a fine volume, I kept one through college. Add some Xenia for movement as nutrient sequestration as well as slow growing red macro algae for phosphate. Good luck!
 
Go with no less than 20g if using a conventional aquarium. Hang in the back equipment will overwhelm a 10g. The biggest challenge with a small SW aquarium is keeping up with evaporated water. A hood will help as long as there is sufficient air exchange but an auto top off device is the best way to go. Figure on $100 for that.

In fact, an all in one with a hood like a bio cube may be the best idea. A 29g cube doesn't take up appreciably more space than a 10g. JMO.
 
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