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breakaway

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Posts posted by breakaway

  1. I'm looking at getting one of these. I like everything being right there and ready to go, plumbed in with a proper sump etc.

    The only downside to this appears to be that the lighting isn't quite up to scratch - it's a plain T5 setup. I'd hate to be limited to what I can keep because of the lighting.

    Is the built-in T5 is "enough" for the first few months while cycling / to keep some low demand corals? It says it has "4×24 watt T5" - It says it has 2 x 24w "sun light" and 2 x 24 w "marine".

  2. Wouldn't bother with cheap yeast stuff. Far too inconsistent. A regulator, solenoid, check valve, needle valve, bubble counter and CO² resistant tubing can be had for about $80 landed.

    The big cost is the gas bottle itself, but then again its worth it versus having an inconsistent system that is messy and takes quite a bit of effort to keep running right.

  3. What do they look like? Kind of like this? http://fnzas.org.nz/fishroom/viewtopic. ... 2e#p471890

    Then yes they are what are known as 'freswhater dwarf puffers', 'pea puffers' or simply 'dwarf puffer'. The latin name is is Carinotetraodon travancoricus. I have had mine for nearly 4 years now. I find them to be very picky eaters. Mine were raised on bloodworms so thats what I feed them. I find that tehy don't mess with snails much bigger. But smaller ones do get eaten. I have 4-6 of them through the years in my 200L heavily planted tank with 4 x khuli loaches, the loaches keep the substrate very clean, and the plants take caer of the rest of it. They don't give the loaches too much grief.

  4. You can't just say 'puffer' and expect people to give accurate advice. That covers everything from the brackish puffers to the relatively tiny freshwater dwarf puffer (Carinotetraodon travancoricus)

    Which one are you getting?

  5. It's not good business if they do not respond to customer feedback.

    Sure it is, if you are a monopoly. Just look at telecom. The government had to step in and regulate them. Sure trademe isn't on the same level but the same rules apply.

    they responded to me, will be interesting to see if any changes are made.

    Indeed will be watching this one :spop:

  6. Unfortunately trademe just doesn't care. They've worked themselves into a situation where they are a household name, and there are pretty much no competitors so they can be as incompetent as possible with practically no repercussions. What are people going to do? Move to sella? Good one!

  7. My biggest female puffer has what appears to be a growth. Popped up approximately 2-3 days ago. Looks a lot like a 'pimple'.

    Her appetite is normal, and the fish doesn't seem otherwise distressed.

    w1kih3g0.h1e.jpg

    yflbmmh1.man.jpg

    The fish shares the tank with 5 other puffers who all appear 100% healthy. I've had the fish for 3 years.

    Any ideas?!

  8. Hi All,

    Came across these LED lights recently: http://www.trademe.co.nz/Building-renovation/Electrical-lighting/Lights/Exterior-lights/auction-393379464.htm

    Then searched it on ebay, and found it for $53 shipped to NZ due to some bad decisions made by the US financial sector, so figured why not?

    The only thing I'm wondering is which is better for plant growth? A color temp of "3000K-3500K" or "6000K~7000K"?

    Now I realise this is badly designed mass produced garbage with little to no quality control so the quoted color temps aren't really to be trusted, and this technology isn't quite as refined as T5HO / halides etc, but as I said - for the price, why not? The only question is - cool white or warm white?

  9. If it's only a 34L Tank I suggest paying ~$70 for a bag of flourish "nutrient rich" substrate from the shop, filling the tank to ~2inches, plant it well, then follow up with weekly water 50% changes and dry fertilizers (using Flourish liquid ferts = ridiculously expensive).

    Dry fertilizers = powered form, you take a bit of tank water, mix up the appropriate amount and dump it back in the tank. There are calculators available freely on the internet that tell you how many t-spoons of powder to put in depending on water volume.

    I would also invest in CO² (try DIY at first, google for instructions), and if you're serious buy a pressurised system.

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