I started a budget college friendly reef tank on December 30th 2022. My goals for this nano reef tank were to be simple and easy to care for yet still get the great results I wanted. My main issues is i’m a college student who works so i don’t have all the time throughout the week to keep a close eye on the little changes that occur. I am a few months in and I seem to have gotten a good rhythm. I feed my fish relatively light and I try to do my best to get a 40 percent water change weekly.
*issues*
- noise can be loud at times but not horrible
- light spread works for now but for more light demanding corals it can be an issue later on
- DIY lid for this nano reef is difficult due to the filter, ATO and light.
- Nassarius snails are too big for this reef (coral has fallen and just go over everything) but do a good job…
*Cycling process*
During this cycling process i took my time as in the past rushing it caused issues that i’d rather not come past again. I used this time to really assess my tank as in a small reef tank changes can occur relatively quick. I began by adding fritz turbo start and putting a few drops of dr. tim’s ammonia. I found that the tank was cycling just fine but a pretty major issue arose. I had made a custom plexiglass lid for this tank which i thought would be perfect due to it being clear and reduce evaporation. Testing the temp of my tank daily i realized it was fluctuating crazy amounts per day, reaching up to 90 degrees fahrenheit. I removed it and replaced to a more stable heater and issue resolved. I replaced the lid with a custom egg crate one until i figure another option.
- i use tap water btw
Live stock
- Yellow watchman goby
- Black storm clownfish
- 3-4 hermit crabs
- 3-4 nassarius snails
- Three bumblebee snails
Corals
- red monti
- green splatter frogspawn
- Toadstool
- GSP
- Green candy cane coral
- Either gsp or green pipe organ coral
- xenia
- Some type of finger leather coral?
equipment
- clear life aqua 70
- standard 10 gallon tank
- aqua knight 1st gen
- heater off of amazon 100 watts
- marine pure spheres
- aragonite
- ATO from amazon $35 on sale
goals
- trying to get coralline algae
- grow beginner sps (birdsnest)
- organize reef differently
- try again to place gsp on wall without it falling
- replace heater to something more compact
*issues*
- noise can be loud at times but not horrible
- light spread works for now but for more light demanding corals it can be an issue later on
- DIY lid for this nano reef is difficult due to the filter, ATO and light.
- Nassarius snails are too big for this reef (coral has fallen and just go over everything) but do a good job…
*Cycling process*
During this cycling process i took my time as in the past rushing it caused issues that i’d rather not come past again. I used this time to really assess my tank as in a small reef tank changes can occur relatively quick. I began by adding fritz turbo start and putting a few drops of dr. tim’s ammonia. I found that the tank was cycling just fine but a pretty major issue arose. I had made a custom plexiglass lid for this tank which i thought would be perfect due to it being clear and reduce evaporation. Testing the temp of my tank daily i realized it was fluctuating crazy amounts per day, reaching up to 90 degrees fahrenheit. I removed it and replaced to a more stable heater and issue resolved. I replaced the lid with a custom egg crate one until i figure another option.
- i use tap water btw
Live stock
- Yellow watchman goby
- Black storm clownfish
- 3-4 hermit crabs
- 3-4 nassarius snails
- Three bumblebee snails
Corals
- red monti
- green splatter frogspawn
- Toadstool
- GSP
- Green candy cane coral
- Either gsp or green pipe organ coral
- xenia
- Some type of finger leather coral?
equipment
- clear life aqua 70
- standard 10 gallon tank
- aqua knight 1st gen
- heater off of amazon 100 watts
- marine pure spheres
- aragonite
- ATO from amazon $35 on sale
goals
- trying to get coralline algae
- grow beginner sps (birdsnest)
- organize reef differently
- try again to place gsp on wall without it falling
- replace heater to something more compact