Hey gang!
I've had 2 previous reef tanks. My first was a 25 gallon tall (I know, horrible choice for a start, right?!) with a HOB skimmer and HOB filter. It did ok, made it two years, but nothing glorious to look at.
My second was a 30g Biocube that I took the lid off and put an AI Nano above it. It lasted about 4 years, but again, wasn't anything to really be amazed by. I had some luck keeping some basic corals, not a lot of growth but survival, which was a solid step. I tore this tank down and sold it when we decided to buy and remodel a new house. When we did, I spent a year remodeling with no time for reefkeeping so the hobby sort of floated to the back of my mind.
I used to spend a lot of time on Captive Reefs and Reef Central, but I figured this time around I'd hang my hat here and see what this forum has to offer.
Since the old tanks, it's been about 8 years or so and I've finished the remodel, moved into the bigger house, and our dog passed away just a few weeks ago. The wife is pretty adamant we can't get another dog (since we do travel somewhat regularly) but she's allowing me to get a reef tank again in exchange for buying her a non-dog-drool covered couch.
My plan is to put in a Red Sea Peninsula 650 Deluxe to separate the living room from the dining room (it would block about 1/2 the width of the room). I'm waiting on my engineer buddy to get back to me if the floor load is ok, but it's basically directly over the main steel beam support in the basement, butting up against an exterior wall, and spanning multiple 2x10 joists as they approach the steel beam, so I'm feeling confident he will say it's okay.
While I wait I've been working out the details. Since it comes with 4 AI Hydra 26's, the lighting is covered. The unit also suggests 1850 gph for the return pump. Right now my plans include:
(1) COR-20 Return Pump
(2) Vortec MP10WQD Pumps
(1) Finnex 300W Titanium Heater
(1) Reef Octopus 200INT 8" Skimmer
(1) Neptune Apex
(1) Neptune DOS (To perform continuous small volume waterchanges)
I will be buying some other 'spare' stuff to act as back-ups in case anything major fails (spare pump, heater, etc).
I also plan on incorporating the Neptune Auto Topoff Kit into my salt mixing station with poly tubs for mixing so the DOS can pull from that. I'll be buying a cheap heater and pump to put in the mixed salt tub to keep it warm and agitated (although, is the heat really necessary if it's dosing so slowly into the main pump that it won't cause temperature swings?)
Then I plan on adding in the Neptune Flow Monitoring Kit and a Leak Detection Kit. I'm a tech guy, I like being able to keep an eye on a lot of 'things that can go wrong' remotely.
The system is fed off of well water that tests clean but I'll likely be putting a 5 or 6 stage RO/DI just to cover my butt. I'll be running the RO/DI into a large poly tank in the basement, and then another poly tank which will house the mixed salt water to feed the DOS as mentioned above. I'm figuring the DOS will need to deal with about 8' of head at most, and Terence from Neptune posted that it's good for about 12' of head so that should be fine.
I will probably be using Reef Saver dry rock since it looks cool how well it 'snaps' together without as much drilling/sawing/fabricating as some of the old rock I dealt with. Then I'll be adding either Original Grade Ocean Direct or Special Grade Arag-Alive. I do plan on having at least one sand sifting goby so I want to try to keep grain sizes that they can process. I also plan on running chaeto in the fuge with an undetermined light for that.
Lastly, since my last tenure in the hobby, I've been reading a lot and I see a whole lot has changed, like nitrates/phosphate not being as evil as they once were (no more shooting for absolute 0 always), and when I was getting out last time deep sand beds (DSBs) were the big debate, which from what I see the debate was lost and 1" or so is considered a 'safe' depth now.
My questions to you, the reefing community are:
1) Does my build look reasonable or is there anything on that list that is sketchy or a known crappy item?
2) Is there anything else I'm missing in terms of equipment?
3) Is there any other 'big' changes in the guidelines for reef keeping that I might be missing or glossing over from the last 10 years? I've been reading but forums put out about 2,000 pages of new information daily so it's hard to keep up.
4) Any other suggestions?
Any help/direction is always appreciated.
I've had 2 previous reef tanks. My first was a 25 gallon tall (I know, horrible choice for a start, right?!) with a HOB skimmer and HOB filter. It did ok, made it two years, but nothing glorious to look at.
My second was a 30g Biocube that I took the lid off and put an AI Nano above it. It lasted about 4 years, but again, wasn't anything to really be amazed by. I had some luck keeping some basic corals, not a lot of growth but survival, which was a solid step. I tore this tank down and sold it when we decided to buy and remodel a new house. When we did, I spent a year remodeling with no time for reefkeeping so the hobby sort of floated to the back of my mind.
I used to spend a lot of time on Captive Reefs and Reef Central, but I figured this time around I'd hang my hat here and see what this forum has to offer.
Since the old tanks, it's been about 8 years or so and I've finished the remodel, moved into the bigger house, and our dog passed away just a few weeks ago. The wife is pretty adamant we can't get another dog (since we do travel somewhat regularly) but she's allowing me to get a reef tank again in exchange for buying her a non-dog-drool covered couch.
My plan is to put in a Red Sea Peninsula 650 Deluxe to separate the living room from the dining room (it would block about 1/2 the width of the room). I'm waiting on my engineer buddy to get back to me if the floor load is ok, but it's basically directly over the main steel beam support in the basement, butting up against an exterior wall, and spanning multiple 2x10 joists as they approach the steel beam, so I'm feeling confident he will say it's okay.
While I wait I've been working out the details. Since it comes with 4 AI Hydra 26's, the lighting is covered. The unit also suggests 1850 gph for the return pump. Right now my plans include:
(1) COR-20 Return Pump
(2) Vortec MP10WQD Pumps
(1) Finnex 300W Titanium Heater
(1) Reef Octopus 200INT 8" Skimmer
(1) Neptune Apex
(1) Neptune DOS (To perform continuous small volume waterchanges)
I will be buying some other 'spare' stuff to act as back-ups in case anything major fails (spare pump, heater, etc).
I also plan on incorporating the Neptune Auto Topoff Kit into my salt mixing station with poly tubs for mixing so the DOS can pull from that. I'll be buying a cheap heater and pump to put in the mixed salt tub to keep it warm and agitated (although, is the heat really necessary if it's dosing so slowly into the main pump that it won't cause temperature swings?)
Then I plan on adding in the Neptune Flow Monitoring Kit and a Leak Detection Kit. I'm a tech guy, I like being able to keep an eye on a lot of 'things that can go wrong' remotely.
The system is fed off of well water that tests clean but I'll likely be putting a 5 or 6 stage RO/DI just to cover my butt. I'll be running the RO/DI into a large poly tank in the basement, and then another poly tank which will house the mixed salt water to feed the DOS as mentioned above. I'm figuring the DOS will need to deal with about 8' of head at most, and Terence from Neptune posted that it's good for about 12' of head so that should be fine.
I will probably be using Reef Saver dry rock since it looks cool how well it 'snaps' together without as much drilling/sawing/fabricating as some of the old rock I dealt with. Then I'll be adding either Original Grade Ocean Direct or Special Grade Arag-Alive. I do plan on having at least one sand sifting goby so I want to try to keep grain sizes that they can process. I also plan on running chaeto in the fuge with an undetermined light for that.
Lastly, since my last tenure in the hobby, I've been reading a lot and I see a whole lot has changed, like nitrates/phosphate not being as evil as they once were (no more shooting for absolute 0 always), and when I was getting out last time deep sand beds (DSBs) were the big debate, which from what I see the debate was lost and 1" or so is considered a 'safe' depth now.
My questions to you, the reefing community are:
1) Does my build look reasonable or is there anything on that list that is sketchy or a known crappy item?
2) Is there anything else I'm missing in terms of equipment?
3) Is there any other 'big' changes in the guidelines for reef keeping that I might be missing or glossing over from the last 10 years? I've been reading but forums put out about 2,000 pages of new information daily so it's hard to keep up.
4) Any other suggestions?
Any help/direction is always appreciated.