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That looks great!Working on my dream 180g right now! Hope to have it up and running this summer...
We started with a 75 gallon reef ready two years ago, then added a 65 gallon reef ready a year later. Just finished cycling a 29 gallon, that needed drilled for a overflow, to run to the sump. We also have a 120 reef ready, stand, canopy and Geo's reef sump that will ship out to us this week. It will probably take another 6-8 months to aquire the remaining items to set this tank up.Hello folks! Hope your day is off to a good one. I'm sure it's going great if you're planning on a new tank upgrade soon! I thought we could talk about that today and what you're planning on doing! So please let us know by answering the following questions:
1. Are you planning to upgrade your aquarium to a BIGGER aquarium soon or at some point down the road?
2. Why are you planning for a bigger tank? Why the upgrade?
If you have any photos of a new upgrade please share!
Brings me back... Lol that was my first reef tank set up!I bought a used 120 reef ready dual overflow 4x2x2 with Current USA 8 bulb T5, stand, heaters and some extra stuff.
Going to be picking it up within the next week or two.
I'm upgrading because my current 40b setup was just a stepping stone to begin with, time to move on, bigger and better!
the physical act of moving live reef materials among tanks is a form of reef surgery that has varying outcomes, its rather easy to find in the emergency forum moves that did not go well. Message me for custom move planning I want the works on file for future jobs. I think we have a bulletproof way to move without loss, worth testing. we have other jobs logged for you to see before you attempt.
basic summary of whole tank transfer safety:
two modes exist: 1 moving over pretty much everything in reef A to reef B including all micro life, waste, and all substrates. various offers exist online on how to pull off a complete transfer. this seems like the ideal way/preserves the most microbial life, but its actually the riskiest way. moving waste over commutes the complete risk in this plan of attack. as you research work threads using this method, you see variation between 'it worked' and my tank cycled again/loss.
2. the no cloud waste transfer. This is where your tank is deep cleaned right in between takedown of A and before setting up B tank. though it seems deep cleaning would be harmful, it resets the age lifespan of your reef, has never caused a mini cycle or recycle, and constitutes none of the failed move attempts in the emergency forum in fact we use the method for 33 pages in the sand rinse thread to fix, move, and upgrade reefs never having to test for ammonia (reliable). it is 100% safe to move reef materials if you move no waste clouding. you have to re ramp your lighting in the new reef/running full production lighting in reef B using same materials is a bleaching risk.
the physical act of moving live reef materials among tanks is a form of reef surgery that has varying outcomes, its rather easy to find in the emergency forum moves that did not go well. Message me for custom move planning I want the works on file for future jobs. I think we have a bulletproof way to move without loss, worth testing. we have other jobs logged for you to see before you attempt.
basic summary of whole tank transfer safety:
two modes exist: 1 moving over pretty much everything in reef A to reef B including all micro life, waste, and all substrates. various offers exist online on how to pull off a complete transfer. this seems like the ideal way/preserves the most microbial life, but its actually the riskiest way. moving waste over commutes the complete risk in this plan of attack. as you research work threads using this method, you see variation between 'it worked' and my tank cycled again/loss.
2. the no cloud waste transfer. This is where your tank is deep cleaned right in between takedown of A and before setting up B tank. though it seems deep cleaning would be harmful, it resets the age lifespan of your reef while maintaining all nitrification ability, has never caused a mini cycle or recycle, and constitutes none of the failed move attempts in the emergency forum in fact we use the method for 33 pages in the sand rinse thread to fix, move, and upgrade reefs never having to test for ammonia (reliable). it is 100% safe to move reef materials if you move no waste clouding. you have to re ramp your lighting in the new reef/running full production lighting in reef B using same materials is a bleaching risk. this method is far more work than approach 1, and you can bet six worms are going to be killed in sandbed rinsing to ensure your thousands of dollars in coral are not killed.