Hello fellow reefers!
I am rebooting my 18g for the third time and am pretty confident/happy so far, so figured a build thread was in order.
Background
I've had this tank for about 7 years now and it has made some major moves with me, including cross country, hence the multiple reboots. It's housed a variety of fishes and corals, and a lot of algae. It's gone from being a cheap setup to an expensive setup to a stable setup.
As for me, I've been in the hobby or 17 years now and kept freshwater tanks for many years before that. I started with a 20g tank, got up to a 125g, and had a a few inbetween. I currently have a 180g sitting in storage while I house hunt. The current 18g is kind of my testing ground for when I finally setup the 180g.
This is my first time posting on R2R. My previous threads have been on RC, but I needed a change from that culture. Onto the tank/build. My apologies, this thread is long and detailed. I tried to cover every aspect of the tank. If I missed anything, please feel free to ask! Comments/suggestions are very welcome as I'm always looking to improve and learn.
Tank, sump, and stand
The tank and sump were custom built by Advanced Acrylics. I had a couple minor issues, but overall the price was good and the tanks have worked out nicely. The stand I built myself, which is apparent in person as I am not a master carpenter. Still trying to figure out how I'm going to build the 180g stand cleanly, but I think the biggest help will be using a sliding circular saw to help keep the legs the same length and square. This stand is a 2x4 frame based on RocketEngineer's design and covered in half inch plywood that I stained.
Equipment
I aim to hit Randy Holmes-Farley's levels as outlined here. In previous setups I've struggled with phosphate and algae, but I think part of that was poor quarantine procedures that introduced the algae on frags. In the current setup my only issue is nitrate.
Below are the levels from last Saturday to this Saturday. I don't have my doser setup yet as I was testing to see how much was being consumed by my single coral.
I feed heavy. I know this contributes to my nitrate issue, but I'm not willing to potentially compromise the health of my fish. And the filter pads should prevent most of this from being an issue.
Twice a day:
Miscellaneous
Recently I connected my AI Prime to my APEX using IOTA. I am not a fan. The graphical interface shows this weird blended spectrum that is pretty useless. I much prefer the visual of the AI interface where I can see the graph of each channel. The APEX also requires a power level be set for each interval, independent of the power level for each individual channel. My assumption is that it has to be equal to or greater than the max intensity of any channel in the interval, but it seems unnecessary and confusing to me. When using the coding view, there are several 0s before and after the channel intensities that I haven't been able to figure out what are for. Spectrum view in APEX:
Untitled by Mike Burns, on Flickr
My project for today is to build a tower for my filter pads. Currently the lay over the entire first sump chamber and are supported by the baffle and a couple of magnets. Not elegant, but it works. The purpose of the tower is to use a smaller pad so I can cut them up into more pieces and go longer between washing. It will be built out of egg crate and continue with my current method of stacking two pads. The top pad will be completely out of the water and the bottom pad will barely touch the water. This is to prevent anything caught by the top pad from sitting in the water and prevent water from dropping into the sump and causing splashing.
Pictures
These are my filter pads after 2 days. The top is the top pad and the bottom is the bottom pad.
Untitled by Mike Burns, on Flickr
Galaxy monti
Untitled by Mike Burns, on Flickr
Midnight clowns (ignore the scratches on the acrylic from the last move :/)
Untitled by Mike Burns, on Flickr
FTS
Untitled by Mike Burns, on Flickr
Sump
Untitled by Mike Burns, on Flickr
PAR (reading bottom right rock where galaxy monti is)
Untitled by Mike Burns, on Flickr
I turned off the probe before screenshotting graph on top of rock where clam will go, doh! But it's about 80 higher.
I use a modified version of Saxby's light schedule. I extended the morning schedule as I work from home and am looking at the tank by 8 AM. I also increased the intensity. Below is the current schedule in Excel, since APEX won't show me this view.
I am rebooting my 18g for the third time and am pretty confident/happy so far, so figured a build thread was in order.
Background
I've had this tank for about 7 years now and it has made some major moves with me, including cross country, hence the multiple reboots. It's housed a variety of fishes and corals, and a lot of algae. It's gone from being a cheap setup to an expensive setup to a stable setup.
As for me, I've been in the hobby or 17 years now and kept freshwater tanks for many years before that. I started with a 20g tank, got up to a 125g, and had a a few inbetween. I currently have a 180g sitting in storage while I house hunt. The current 18g is kind of my testing ground for when I finally setup the 180g.
This is my first time posting on R2R. My previous threads have been on RC, but I needed a change from that culture. Onto the tank/build. My apologies, this thread is long and detailed. I tried to cover every aspect of the tank. If I missed anything, please feel free to ask! Comments/suggestions are very welcome as I'm always looking to improve and learn.
Tank, sump, and stand
The tank and sump were custom built by Advanced Acrylics. I had a couple minor issues, but overall the price was good and the tanks have worked out nicely. The stand I built myself, which is apparent in person as I am not a master carpenter. Still trying to figure out how I'm going to build the 180g stand cleanly, but I think the biggest help will be using a sliding circular saw to help keep the legs the same length and square. This stand is a 2x4 frame based on RocketEngineer's design and covered in half inch plywood that I stained.
Equipment
- Apex
- COR-15 return pump
- Auto top off kit
- Fluid monitoring kit
- Par monitoring kit
- Doser for calcium and alkalinity
- Temp and salinity probes
- I had ORP and pH probes, but they hit end of life and I haven't replaced them. I don't intend to replace ORP and am still debating pH.
- Skimmer - Tunze Comline DOC 9001 DC
- Light - AI Prime
- Tunze nano 6020
- Eheim Jager 50w heater
- BRS RO/DI
- Added 1 lb of cured real reef rock and left it alone for a week.
- Added ~10 lbs of dry reef saver rock.
- Added ammonium chloride.
- Added Seachem Stability for a week.
- Added MicroBacter 7 for a week.
- Let tank sit for another week, then did a water change.
- Don't have the exact timeline, but start to adding fish was about 6 weeks.
I aim to hit Randy Holmes-Farley's levels as outlined here. In previous setups I've struggled with phosphate and algae, but I think part of that was poor quarantine procedures that introduced the algae on frags. In the current setup my only issue is nitrate.
Below are the levels from last Saturday to this Saturday. I don't have my doser setup yet as I was testing to see how much was being consumed by my single coral.
- Alkalinity (Hanna) - 9.3 to 8.8
- Ammonia (API) - .25 to .25
- Calcium (Salifert) - 400 to 365
- Magnesium (Salifert) - 1095 to 1020
- Nitrate (Salifert) - 10 to 50
- Phosphate (Hanna) - .03 to .00
- Salinity (APEX) - 34.4
- Temp (APEX) - 78.5. APEX is set to turn the heater on below 78 and off above 78.5.
- Scrape the acrylic weekly. I have very light diatoms that start showing up on the glass after about 6 days.
- Clean skimmer cup weekly.
- Replace filter pads every other day.
- Manually dose magnesium weekly.
- Refill calcium and alk reservoirs, as needed.
- Refill ATO reservoir weekly.
- Wash filter pads every other week or so.
- Clean ATO sensors, as needed.
- Clean pumps every 3-6 months.
- Until I figure out how to lower my nitrates, I'm doing 5g weekly water changes.
- The tank is currently barebottom, but I'm considering adding dry reef flakes. The purpose of the barebottom was to limit algae and make maintenance easy, but I hate the aesthetic and it should add some level of nitrate reduction, but likely not enough to solve my nitrate problem.
- Pair of captive bred midnight ocellaris
- Galaxy montipora
- About 10 lbs of dry reef saver rock
- 1 lb of cured real reef rock from my LFS
- Clam, either maxima or crocea. This will be the show piece, bright blue, and sit right on top of the middle rock.
- Plating montipora. This will be glued to the bottom front right of the middle rock so that it grows out over the front right corner of the tank.
- Some form of acropora. This will go on the top of the back left rock.
- Fire shrimp
- Snails
- Maybe a couple scarlet hermits
- Maybe a more elusive fish. My clowns are very docile, even during feeding, and I'd love a possum or pink streaked wrasse to give me some movement in the rockwork as the clowns hover well outside of the rockwork. I've had a pink streaked wrasse before and loved him, but it was way too shy and got bullied by passive fishes. I've never had a possum. I'm also considering a six line as I'm sure it could fend for itself, but am worried about it harassing the clowns. However, since my clowns literally hangout in the upper corner all day and night, it may not be an issue.
I feed heavy. I know this contributes to my nitrate issue, but I'm not willing to potentially compromise the health of my fish. And the filter pads should prevent most of this from being an issue.
Twice a day:
- Add crushed Omega One flakes to cup.
- Add crushed NutriDiet Chlorella flakes to cup.
- Add New Life Spectrum 1mm Marine Formula pellets to cup.
- Soak above in Selcon for 10 minutes.
- Add tank water to cup.
- Add small piece of LRS Reef Frenzy Nano to cup.
- Let sit for 5 minutes.
- Stir until broken up.
- Pour into tank.
Miscellaneous
Recently I connected my AI Prime to my APEX using IOTA. I am not a fan. The graphical interface shows this weird blended spectrum that is pretty useless. I much prefer the visual of the AI interface where I can see the graph of each channel. The APEX also requires a power level be set for each interval, independent of the power level for each individual channel. My assumption is that it has to be equal to or greater than the max intensity of any channel in the interval, but it seems unnecessary and confusing to me. When using the coding view, there are several 0s before and after the channel intensities that I haven't been able to figure out what are for. Spectrum view in APEX:
Untitled by Mike Burns, on Flickr
My project for today is to build a tower for my filter pads. Currently the lay over the entire first sump chamber and are supported by the baffle and a couple of magnets. Not elegant, but it works. The purpose of the tower is to use a smaller pad so I can cut them up into more pieces and go longer between washing. It will be built out of egg crate and continue with my current method of stacking two pads. The top pad will be completely out of the water and the bottom pad will barely touch the water. This is to prevent anything caught by the top pad from sitting in the water and prevent water from dropping into the sump and causing splashing.
Pictures
These are my filter pads after 2 days. The top is the top pad and the bottom is the bottom pad.
Untitled by Mike Burns, on Flickr
Galaxy monti
Untitled by Mike Burns, on Flickr
Midnight clowns (ignore the scratches on the acrylic from the last move :/)
Untitled by Mike Burns, on Flickr
FTS
Untitled by Mike Burns, on Flickr
Sump
Untitled by Mike Burns, on Flickr
PAR (reading bottom right rock where galaxy monti is)
Untitled by Mike Burns, on Flickr
I turned off the probe before screenshotting graph on top of rock where clam will go, doh! But it's about 80 higher.
I use a modified version of Saxby's light schedule. I extended the morning schedule as I work from home and am looking at the tank by 8 AM. I also increased the intensity. Below is the current schedule in Excel, since APEX won't show me this view.