I could use some advice. My tank has had near total neglect since my second kid was born last august, and the bill has come due so to speak. When my urchin started looking in really poor shape, I sent out an ICP to see just how bad the water quality was. (surprise surprise ... it was ... _really_ bad). At first we thought maybe a sprint of daily water changes could get things back in order, but then a mishap (probably user error) during one caused me to get up close and personal with the sump and stand while cleaning up the mess. I did not like what I saw... the sump is showing signs of stress fractures, and the stand is starting to deteriorate. Neither is terribly surprising - I got this setup second hand, and I'm pretty sure the person who had it before me got it second hand. So the stand is at least 6 years old, and the sump is likely older - and I doubt either were particularly high quality to begin with. Regardless - the warning signs must be heeded before a real problem occurs.
Unfortunately, even though the baby is sleeping through the night, we are still completely under water with our time on a daily basis - which of course is why the tank was neglected. Trying to give even an hour a week to the tank is not a realistic proposition at this time.
So the question is where to go from here - tear the tank down and take a hiatus from reefing, or get a new (and smaller!!) tank set up to be as low maintenance as possible (like no more than 1-2 hours a month)? We all like looking at the tank (even the baby watches the fish), but time is the big concern.
Would something like a FOWLR be doable for this, that could maybe be upgraded to a reef down the line as time allows?
Simplify everything possible, and automate whatever is left? Maybe a rollermat, automated phosphates checking, and either carbon dosing or an algae reactor? Is 1-2 hours per month even plausible?
I would imagine that if I were to downsize, the new tank would have to be as complete out of the box as possible - maybe an AIO or a tank that comes with stand, sump and plumbing.
Even if a truly low maintenance tank is a realistic goal, my wife and I are very worried about the design and setup time. Again, see the total neglect the current tank has received.
Any ideas, suggestions, and experiences with similar situations would be welcome.
Unfortunately, even though the baby is sleeping through the night, we are still completely under water with our time on a daily basis - which of course is why the tank was neglected. Trying to give even an hour a week to the tank is not a realistic proposition at this time.
So the question is where to go from here - tear the tank down and take a hiatus from reefing, or get a new (and smaller!!) tank set up to be as low maintenance as possible (like no more than 1-2 hours a month)? We all like looking at the tank (even the baby watches the fish), but time is the big concern.
Would something like a FOWLR be doable for this, that could maybe be upgraded to a reef down the line as time allows?
Simplify everything possible, and automate whatever is left? Maybe a rollermat, automated phosphates checking, and either carbon dosing or an algae reactor? Is 1-2 hours per month even plausible?
I would imagine that if I were to downsize, the new tank would have to be as complete out of the box as possible - maybe an AIO or a tank that comes with stand, sump and plumbing.
Even if a truly low maintenance tank is a realistic goal, my wife and I are very worried about the design and setup time. Again, see the total neglect the current tank has received.
Any ideas, suggestions, and experiences with similar situations would be welcome.
