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Nano reef


tinytawnykitten

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yea there are people here that have nano-reefs, some just don't post them.

Ok 1st things 1st. Read, read, then read some more. Trust me it will all come in handy. :)

Everything for a large tank applies just on a smaller scale.

An auto-topup is almost a necessity to keep salinity right as such a small water volume loses alot of freshwater due to evaporation.

Minimum lighting would either be power compacts or t5ho. These would be good for soft corals etc.

A skimmer isn't really necessary if you are religious with weekly water changes.

Maybe a small powerhead or 2 will suffice for water movement also.

Have a think about these points and if you are still interested in going to the "darkside" :lol: drop a post up with a stocking list or more questions regarding it. I'm sure 1 of us will drop a reply. :)

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Hehe how much money you got...

Ok.. forget everything you know about freshwater... marine is so much more advanced...

ideally you want to drill the tank and put in an overflow so your taking the crap off the top of the water, protein/fats etc

The more costly parts would be: Protein skimmer, auto top-up system, powerheads/wavemakers? for water movement, sump, Lighting ie: metal halide/T5 tubes? and lots of other small bits n pieces that all add up!

you can buy quality German stuff that wont fall over and perform superbly and quietly

Or you can go chinese which youll eventually throw in the bin and end up buying the german stuff anyway :wink:

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Ok.. forget everything you know about freshwater... marine is so much more advanced...

ideally you want to drill the tank and put in an overflow so your taking the crap off the top of the water, protein/fats etc

The more costly parts would be: Protein skimmer, auto top-up system, powerheads/wavemakers? for water movement, Lighting ie: metal halide/T5 tubes? and lots of other small bits n pieces that all add up!

you can buy quality German stuff that wont fall over and perform :

Wouldn't say forget everything you know about freshwater and not really that much more advanced either.

For sure there are some equipment differences and slightly different things to test for but other than that pretty much the same.

tinytawnykitten

Suggest you work out what you want to spend on it.

Then look into gear Top one is the most important

Skimmer - this will make or break the tank (Deltec MCE 300 or 500)

Lights 2xAtinic 2xMarine white T8s, no need to go brighter for this size tank.

Coral sand

Coral rock

Test kits CA KH first then NO3 and MG

Salt

Heater

Couple of small pumps

No need for top up systems or anything like that for a tank like this, good fitting lid you will have no problems.

Have to start somewhere

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what sort of things are you looking to keep? With that sort of tank you will be ok with small fish (eg gobys, firefish, clowns) but if you decide you want fish and corals then you will need to make sure you either keep up the water changes religiously or get a really good quality skimmer such as the ones listed above.

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In general, keeping saltwater fish is more expensive and more difficult than keeping freshwater fish. However, once established they do seem to be less demanding and water quality tends to stay better in tanks using live rock. Live plants perform similar (albeit to a lower degree) functions in water filtration in a freshwater aquarium. If you've been keeping freshwater tanks for some time now successfully the switch to saltwater should not be all that difficult. If you have the desire, the fortitude to do the necessary research before acquiring animals and aquarium equipment and the money necessary to run a saltwater aquarium, then by all means go for it! Once you get started you'll be wondering why it took you so long to get into the saltwater side of the hobby.

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Get ready to spend so much you wanna fall backwards once you find out prices etc. And remember, if it fails, you loose everything FAST! not like Freshwater stuff. You go cheap, you loose out in the end, and loose stuff that costs you a TON! Trust these Salties like Rockerpeller etc, they know what they are doing! It also costs LOTS more to run etc too, so if you have a heap of Freshwaters, be prepared to get rid of a few!

Go visit a few Salties first before you buy ANYTHING! Also look up some prices on Livestock, Rock, Sand, Test Kits, Skimmers, Pumps, T5 or Metal Halide Lights, Food, Chemicals etc.

Know how to keep your water right, the right lights (Corals etc NEED it!) what food to feed, how to get rid of pests (not easy like Freshwater! - Pests KILL Corals etc!)

Here's Mystic's wee baby:

(VERY different from when you seen it I bet)

- (Also going to upgrade a few hundred Ltrs or so - You will go bigger fast!

Sea Hares:

DSCF5779--Small-_580x435.jpg

Metallic Blue Bristleworm:

DSCF5862--Small-_580x435.jpg

Breeding Seahares:

DSCF5901--Small-_580x435.jpg

Charlie!

DSCF6296--Small-_580x435.jpg

Charlie:

DSCF6301--Small-_580x435.jpg

Whole Tank Shot:

DSCF6141--Small-_580x435.jpg

Mystic said sorry for the bad pix.

HTH.

Lucid

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ballistic

Eh what?

wow all of that in a 28l!how much lighting does it get what kind how often does it get water changed what filters are you running on it?

Yup. Normal light, Water change once a month, small internal (cant remember)

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Thats not the best example is it?

Im geussing the standard saltwater one would be wilc caught?

And a wild caught Angel(freshwater) would cost quite abit too.

Well no one in NZ breeds marine angelfish and I'm not even sure if they can be breed in captivity unlike freshwater angels. Most saltwater fish are wild caught thats why they are expensive. Only clowns and Bangaii cardinals are breed in NZ to my knowledge and even then you are looking at about $60 for a clownfish and $90 for a Bangaii cardinal.

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Thats true if you compare fish with fish but look at total cost.

Say you have a 100ltr tank

You might have 4 marine fish like 2 clowns ($50 each), 1x Flame angel ($150) and a blenny ($50). 4 Asst corals ($69) Total $576

Freshwater you might have 4 Discus ($85 each) 20 Cardinals ($8 each) 6 x Albino catfish ($5 each) Total $530

So to stock a smallish tank it can be about the same as freshwater depending on what you want..

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