New Again

dbeatty1954

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Hello all, used to have salt water aquariums many years ago, 10+ years, and have had the itch to get back into it. Recently I purchased a Coralife Biocube29 to start back into the hobby. Current setup includes the Biocube, I have removed the bioballs and replaced that with an Eshoppes sponge filter and poly filter media on top. Also have a 150 Watt heater in the overflow compartment. The sponge is in the second compartment along with the poly filter on top of the sponge filter. There is also a Tunze 9001 protein skimmer in the second compartment and a bag of Seachem Matrix bio media in the bottom. Third compartment has just the return pump. Stock lighting right now. I have two Hydor Nano 420 powerheads with a Hydor contorller. Also a JBJ OTA. I have 20 lbs of live sand and 24 lbs of live rock. I seeded the tank with saltwater from my LFS. Currently no fish or clean up crew is in the tank. Tank has been up for approximately 2 1/2 weeks. PH is about 8.2, ammonia is 0, nitrite is 0, nitrate is about 5-10 ppm. SG is 1.027 or 35 ppt. Looking forward to adding clean up crew, but have been fighting some green hair algae. I have done a couple of water changes of about 10-15%. I love salt water aquariums and eventually would like to have fish and corals in my tank, but seems like I am getting no where. Don't get me wrong I realize it is a slow process, but was hoping somebody could make some suggestions in regards to my tank. If this works out over the next couple of years I would be inclined to move to a larger tank, maybe 100 gallons or so, but I want to make the nano work first. Any thoughts or help will be appreciated. I apologize as I am sure you folks see similiar post on a regular basis. Thanks again.:squigglemouth:
 

Reefing Madness

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Hair Algae is not uncommon in new tanks, this is where your CUC comes into play for you. Snails should make short work of it. Also you'll want to start testing your phosphates and possibly think about getting GFO or a Lanthanum product to remove this from your water, as this will more than likely be the cause of your HA problem.
 

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