Got bored and took a few macros this afternoon.
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
Sunday, June 19, 2011
Livestock
As promised in the last post, here is the livestock side of the tank. Hey, equipment is cool. You get the package, you open the box, and it's like Christmas! But hey, I didn't get into this hobby to stare at a bunch of gizmos and gadgets. Here are the critters that bring the tank to life!
Live Rock and Live Sand
~100 Pounds of Fiji and Tonga Live Rock
~80 Pounds Live Sand
Fish: (Please forgive me for the poor quality. I stink at photographing moving targets)
Pair of Ocellaris Clowns
Yellow Tang
Coral Beauty Angelfish
Royal Gramma
Ivertabrates:
Coral Banded Shrimp
Skunk Cleaner Shrimp
Various Snails and Hermits (Don't know how many)
Derasa Clam :)
Corals:
Pulsing Xenia
Blue Xenia
Green Star Polyps
Various Mushrooms
Various Zoanthids
Finger Leather
Snowflake Polyps
Red Acans
Branching Hammer
Some sort of SPS
Green Birdsnest
Live Rock and Live Sand
~100 Pounds of Fiji and Tonga Live Rock
~80 Pounds Live Sand
Fish: (Please forgive me for the poor quality. I stink at photographing moving targets)
Pair of Ocellaris Clowns
Yellow Tang
Coral Beauty Angelfish
Royal Gramma
Ivertabrates:
Coral Banded Shrimp
Skunk Cleaner Shrimp
Various Snails and Hermits (Don't know how many)
Corals:
Pulsing Xenia
Blue Xenia
Green Star Polyps
Various Mushrooms
Various Zoanthids
Finger Leather
Snowflake Polyps
Red Acans
Branching Hammer
Some sort of SPS
Green Birdsnest
Where The Tank is Now
As I promised in the last post, here is a description of where the tank is now.
Equipment
Tank, Stand, and Canopy:
90 Gallon Oceanic Reef Ready Tank
Don't know what kind of stand and canopy are included, but they get the job done
Canopy is modded to raise the metal halide lighting 10" off of the water and to look more pleasing to the eye
Filtration:
29 Gallon Sump/Refugium
Refugium lit by two T5s with Glo Ballast
Cheato and Mangroves with Live Sand
Mag 7 Return Pump
BRS Dual GFO/Carbon Reactor with ROX .8 Carbon and High Capacity GFO driven by Maxi Jet 1200
SWC Protein Skimmer (Don't know the specific model. Seller said it was rated for 200 gallons)
Lighting:
400 Watt Metal Halide
14k XM Bulb
Driven by HID Electronic Ballast
3 Actinic VHO's
URI Bulbs
Driven by Icecap (440?) Ballast
Top Off/Dosing:
Chicago Sensor Float Switch rigged into extention cord
Aqualifter Pump
6 Gallon Holding Container
2 tsp/Gallon Kalk Mix
Flow:
Provided by Mag 7 Return Pump (see filtration section for picture)
Maxi Jet 1200 modded to push 2,000GPH
Fresh Water:
BRS 6 Stage Deluxe RO/DI Unit
Water stored in 13 gallon holding container
That's enough for the equipment side of the tank. I'll post something with the livestock next post :)
Equipment
Tank, Stand, and Canopy:
90 Gallon Oceanic Reef Ready Tank
Don't know what kind of stand and canopy are included, but they get the job done
Canopy is modded to raise the metal halide lighting 10" off of the water and to look more pleasing to the eye
Filtration:
29 Gallon Sump/Refugium
Refugium lit by two T5s with Glo Ballast
Cheato and Mangroves with Live Sand
Mag 7 Return Pump
BRS Dual GFO/Carbon Reactor with ROX .8 Carbon and High Capacity GFO driven by Maxi Jet 1200
SWC Protein Skimmer (Don't know the specific model. Seller said it was rated for 200 gallons)
Lighting:
400 Watt Metal Halide
14k XM Bulb
Driven by HID Electronic Ballast
3 Actinic VHO's
URI Bulbs
Driven by Icecap (440?) Ballast
Top Off/Dosing:
Chicago Sensor Float Switch rigged into extention cord
Aqualifter Pump
6 Gallon Holding Container
2 tsp/Gallon Kalk Mix
Flow:
Provided by Mag 7 Return Pump (see filtration section for picture)
Maxi Jet 1200 modded to push 2,000GPH
Fresh Water:
BRS 6 Stage Deluxe RO/DI Unit
Water stored in 13 gallon holding container
That's enough for the equipment side of the tank. I'll post something with the livestock next post :)
Before It Was Mine...
I'll be honest, this tank isn't my original creation. I bought it used and it came with most of the livestock that is in it now. I have added a fish, a clam, and a few corals. When I bought it, it came with
Tank, Stand, and Canopy
29 Gallon Sump/Refugium with
Cheato/Live Sand
Mag 7 Return Pump
Two T5s for Lighting
SWC Skimmer (Don't know what kind, but the seller told me it was rated for 200 gallons)
400 Watt 14K Metal Halide driven by HID Electronic Ballast
Three Actinic VHO's driven by Icecap Ballast (440?)
Two Maxi Jet 1200's. One modified for 2,000GPH Output
API Test Kits and Coralife Hydrometer (Death Glare at seller)
Bag of Old Carbon in the sump
Petco Algae Scraper and MagFloat
Various Calcium and Alkalinity supplements
100 Pounds of Fiji and Tonga live rock
80 pounds of sand
Livestock:
Fish:
Yellow Tang
Blue Tang
Sailfin Tang
Scopas Tang
Pair of Ocellaris Clowns
Coral Beauty Angelfish
Two Blue Damsels in the Sump (dissapeared after I put the britte star in the sump. hmmmm)
Inverts:
Coral Banded Shrimp
Skunk Cleaner Shrimp
Various Snails and Hermits (too many to count)
Harlequin Starfish
Brittle Starfish (thrown into the sump)
Corals:
Pulsing Xenia
Blue Xenia
Red Acans
Various Zoanthids
Various Mushrooms
Finger Leather
Branching Hammer
Green Star Polyps
Snowflake Polyps
Some sort of SPS frag. I think it's a pocillopora or digitata
When buying the tank, everything looked healthy, so I didn't hesitate to take the tank and everything in it. BUT, there were some things seriously wrong with the way the seller was keeping the tank.
1. He never did water changes
2. He never tested his water. He just watched the fish and corals for signs
3. He used TAP WATER
4. He had too many tangs in the tank, some of which would eventually outgrow the tank
5. He cut the grounds off of the plug for the metal halide ballast so they would fit onto a timer. That's WAY too much electricity to not have a ground
6. There was no auto top off system, which probably caused him to have salinity swings
7. His test kits were garbage. He was using API test kits and a swing arm hydrometer, both of which are VERY innacurate
Obviously some things had to change. This was going to cost MUCH more than I originally though. This is what I have changed so far (not necissarily in this order)
1. Replaced cheap API test kits with Salifert and Hanna Checkers
2. Replace the swing arm hydrometer with a BRS Refractometer
3. Buy an RO/DI unit
4. Started doing water changes
5. Added a BRS Dual GFO/Carbon Reactor to bring down phosphates and nitrates
6. Added an auto top off system and started dosing kalkwasser
7. Sold the Blue, Scopas, and Sailfin tangs
8. Moved the brittle starfish into the sump
9. Replace the plug on the metal halide ballast
10. Bought timers for the lights
11. Modded the canopy to raise the metal halide bulb ~10" off the water and make the canopy more visually pleasing
12. Added a digital thermometer
And I still need to
1. Mod the skimmer to allow for control of the water level
2. Add another Maxi Jet 1200 with the 2,000GPH mod
3. Buy a Hanna Phosphate Checker
As of now, the tank is actually in very good shape. Nitrates are undetectable, SG is holding at 1.026, calcium and alkalinity are generally more high than low. All of the livestock has been very healthy. The fish are fat and eating like pigs and the corals are not only open, but growing. I'll give you more details of the tank in the next post :)
Tank, Stand, and Canopy
29 Gallon Sump/Refugium with
Cheato/Live Sand
Mag 7 Return Pump
Two T5s for Lighting
SWC Skimmer (Don't know what kind, but the seller told me it was rated for 200 gallons)
400 Watt 14K Metal Halide driven by HID Electronic Ballast
Three Actinic VHO's driven by Icecap Ballast (440?)
Two Maxi Jet 1200's. One modified for 2,000GPH Output
API Test Kits and Coralife Hydrometer (Death Glare at seller)
Bag of Old Carbon in the sump
Petco Algae Scraper and MagFloat
Various Calcium and Alkalinity supplements
100 Pounds of Fiji and Tonga live rock
80 pounds of sand
Livestock:
Fish:
Yellow Tang
Blue Tang
Sailfin Tang
Scopas Tang
Pair of Ocellaris Clowns
Coral Beauty Angelfish
Two Blue Damsels in the Sump (dissapeared after I put the britte star in the sump. hmmmm)
Inverts:
Coral Banded Shrimp
Skunk Cleaner Shrimp
Various Snails and Hermits (too many to count)
Harlequin Starfish
Brittle Starfish (thrown into the sump)
Corals:
Pulsing Xenia
Blue Xenia
Red Acans
Various Zoanthids
Various Mushrooms
Finger Leather
Branching Hammer
Green Star Polyps
Snowflake Polyps
Some sort of SPS frag. I think it's a pocillopora or digitata
When buying the tank, everything looked healthy, so I didn't hesitate to take the tank and everything in it. BUT, there were some things seriously wrong with the way the seller was keeping the tank.
1. He never did water changes
2. He never tested his water. He just watched the fish and corals for signs
3. He used TAP WATER
4. He had too many tangs in the tank, some of which would eventually outgrow the tank
5. He cut the grounds off of the plug for the metal halide ballast so they would fit onto a timer. That's WAY too much electricity to not have a ground
6. There was no auto top off system, which probably caused him to have salinity swings
7. His test kits were garbage. He was using API test kits and a swing arm hydrometer, both of which are VERY innacurate
Obviously some things had to change. This was going to cost MUCH more than I originally though. This is what I have changed so far (not necissarily in this order)
1. Replaced cheap API test kits with Salifert and Hanna Checkers
2. Replace the swing arm hydrometer with a BRS Refractometer
3. Buy an RO/DI unit
4. Started doing water changes
5. Added a BRS Dual GFO/Carbon Reactor to bring down phosphates and nitrates
6. Added an auto top off system and started dosing kalkwasser
7. Sold the Blue, Scopas, and Sailfin tangs
8. Moved the brittle starfish into the sump
9. Replace the plug on the metal halide ballast
10. Bought timers for the lights
11. Modded the canopy to raise the metal halide bulb ~10" off the water and make the canopy more visually pleasing
12. Added a digital thermometer
And I still need to
1. Mod the skimmer to allow for control of the water level
2. Add another Maxi Jet 1200 with the 2,000GPH mod
3. Buy a Hanna Phosphate Checker
As of now, the tank is actually in very good shape. Nitrates are undetectable, SG is holding at 1.026, calcium and alkalinity are generally more high than low. All of the livestock has been very healthy. The fish are fat and eating like pigs and the corals are not only open, but growing. I'll give you more details of the tank in the next post :)
Welcome!
Hi everyone! Welcome to my blog about my 90 gallon reef aquarium! I will be using this blog to document my experiences with the tank and hopefully provide a reference for future reefkeepers.
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