Greetings,
My name is Mike. I am new to the saltwater community, although I have had various aquariums throughout my life, mostly African Cichlids. My 9yr old son (Ethan) has taken an interest, so we decided to look for a tank and found a good deal. We just bought a pre-owned 125 gallon saltwater tank setup from a local bowling alley for $400 :
metal stand
100 lbs of live rock and 3 fish (niger trigger, clown and butterfly)
a bunch of marine sand
2x Marineland led light strips
sump tank with sump pump
Octopus skimmer
2x rear-hanging Penguin bio-wheel filters
a bunch of cool looking fake coral
a bunch of Fluval brand carbon bags (70gal rated), and a mid size bag of bio-balls
He said the tank was running for over 5 years, but as you can see from the photo, it was poorly maintained. The good news is that (after a good cleaning) most of the stuff seems to be in decent condition. I decided to take a bunch of his saltwater and have it stored in 5gallon Lowes buckets with the lids closed. His live rock was not populated with any living coral, but seems OK. I have the live rock and 3 fish in a 30gal temporary tank with one of the Penguin hanging filters running just a Fluval activated carbon bag. Photo shown.
We are planning on doing a custom built-in style aquarium and have the prefect spot for it. One of the things I enjoyed most about keeping Cichlids was that I created an almost zero-maintenance system with a Fluval canister filter and under-gravel plates. I would like to keep this saltwater setup as low maintenance as possible.
I am thinking about using very little sand (if any), there's a video on youtube that uses no sand, and just a bunch of small asterina starfish. He also has it set to low-flow during the day which encourages polyps expansion and looks really cool. I'd like to keep the sump tank simple like his - sock, skimmer, heaters and pump. Not sure what all of his mounted controllers are for, but seems like two of them are for the wave makers, not sure what else. youtube.com/watch?v=pBXdjIBjXvg
I read the "redundancy" post on here and I think there's some good ideas which I want to incorporate into my setup.
I plan to sell the Penguin filters, led lights and fake coral on ebay and put that money towards:
API Saltwater Master Test Kit
good lights
a better quality sump pump?
a battery backup system for just the sump pump and maybe 1 wave maker
2x Jebao wave-makers w controllers (the low power ones)
2x heaters for the sump
What do you guys think? Any advice is greatly appreciated.
My name is Mike. I am new to the saltwater community, although I have had various aquariums throughout my life, mostly African Cichlids. My 9yr old son (Ethan) has taken an interest, so we decided to look for a tank and found a good deal. We just bought a pre-owned 125 gallon saltwater tank setup from a local bowling alley for $400 :
metal stand
100 lbs of live rock and 3 fish (niger trigger, clown and butterfly)
a bunch of marine sand
2x Marineland led light strips
sump tank with sump pump
Octopus skimmer
2x rear-hanging Penguin bio-wheel filters
a bunch of cool looking fake coral
a bunch of Fluval brand carbon bags (70gal rated), and a mid size bag of bio-balls
He said the tank was running for over 5 years, but as you can see from the photo, it was poorly maintained. The good news is that (after a good cleaning) most of the stuff seems to be in decent condition. I decided to take a bunch of his saltwater and have it stored in 5gallon Lowes buckets with the lids closed. His live rock was not populated with any living coral, but seems OK. I have the live rock and 3 fish in a 30gal temporary tank with one of the Penguin hanging filters running just a Fluval activated carbon bag. Photo shown.
We are planning on doing a custom built-in style aquarium and have the prefect spot for it. One of the things I enjoyed most about keeping Cichlids was that I created an almost zero-maintenance system with a Fluval canister filter and under-gravel plates. I would like to keep this saltwater setup as low maintenance as possible.
I am thinking about using very little sand (if any), there's a video on youtube that uses no sand, and just a bunch of small asterina starfish. He also has it set to low-flow during the day which encourages polyps expansion and looks really cool. I'd like to keep the sump tank simple like his - sock, skimmer, heaters and pump. Not sure what all of his mounted controllers are for, but seems like two of them are for the wave makers, not sure what else. youtube.com/watch?v=pBXdjIBjXvg
I read the "redundancy" post on here and I think there's some good ideas which I want to incorporate into my setup.
I plan to sell the Penguin filters, led lights and fake coral on ebay and put that money towards:
API Saltwater Master Test Kit
good lights
a better quality sump pump?
a battery backup system for just the sump pump and maybe 1 wave maker
2x Jebao wave-makers w controllers (the low power ones)
2x heaters for the sump
What do you guys think? Any advice is greatly appreciated.