How much sand for my tank?

POIUY678

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Hi, I have a 55 gallon tank that Im planning to turn into a reef tank.

I bought 70 pounds of sand and this is what my tank looks like after 35 pounds of sand
20221228_003837.jpg

I feel like if I add the other 35 pounds of sand, it'll be too much, how much more should I add or is this good enough?
 
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Hi, I have a 55 gallon tank that Im planning to turn into a reef tank.

I bought 70 pounds of sand and this is what my tank looks like after 35 pounds of sand
View attachment 2950299
I feel like if I add the other 35 pounds of sand, it'll be too much, how much more should I add or is this good enough?
1-2 inches is what is generally recommended in the hobby unless you want a deep sand bed or have animals, like a fish, that tunnel in the sand.
 
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Depends on what you want . But for average roughly 1.5-2” is plenty
There was an article awhile ago in regards to sand beds and if kept less than 1” there is little to no effects of vacuumed frequently with water changes . But deeper sand can hold on to much more toxins after it matures .
perhaps it’s referring to deeper sand beds greater than 4” depth
 

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Hi, I have a 55 gallon tank that Im planning to turn into a reef tank.

I bought 70 pounds of sand and this is what my tank looks like after 35 pounds of sand
View attachment 2950299
I feel like if I add the other 35 pounds of sand, it'll be too much, how much more should I add or is this good enough?
4 for 2" thickness or 6 for 2.5" thickness
 
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POIUY678

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1-2 inches is what is generally recommended in the hobby unless you want a deep sand bed or have animals, like a fish, that tunnel in the sand.
I do plan on having creatures such as goby or snails that will enjoy the sand, how deep do you think the sand bed should be if I plan to keep a goby/snail?
 
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POIUY678

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It really depends on what you're keeping. If you want sand sifting creatures I'd recommend adding the rest. I'm using about 70 pounds of sand in my tank and it looks fine, just make sure it's evenly spread.
I do plan on keeping goby and snails, how deep is your sand bed if you don't mind me asking?
 
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I do plan on having creatures such as goby or snails that will enjoy the sand, how deep do you think the sand bed should be if I plan to keep a goby/snail?
That I don’t know but a quick Google search will give a good idea in a minute.
 

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In our 55, we keep a mix of snails, a pistol shrimp and goby pair, etc. I went crazy with 120 lbs live sand and feel like that's too much for sure. We are in the middle of moving the tank and will be replacing the sand with new and reducing to 70-80. Feel free to check my build thread for what 120 lbs looks like in a 55 long.. In a few weeks I'll have shots of it reduced to ~80.
 

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Depends on what you want . But for average roughly 1.5-2” is plenty
There was an article awhile ago in regards to sand beds and if kept less than 1” there is little to no effects of vacuumed frequently with water changes . But deeper sand can hold on to much more toxins after it matures .
perhaps it’s referring to deeper sand beds greater than 4” depth
Hi, Do you have the link to that article? I'm researching the subject. Thanks!
 
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Hi, I have a 55 gallon tank that Im planning to turn into a reef tank.

I bought 70 pounds of sand and this is what my tank looks like after 35 pounds of sand
View attachment 2950299
I feel like if I add the other 35 pounds of sand, it'll be too much, how much more should I add or is this good enough?
Typically it's one lbs. Per gal. to start regular coverage. Plenums and deep sand beds go up to two lbs. Per gal.
 
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AquaticVisualPleasures Al

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Hi, I have a 55 gallon tank that Im planning to turn into a reef tank.

I bought 70 pounds of sand and this is what my tank looks like after 35 pounds of sand
View attachment 2950299
I feel like if I add the other 35 pounds of sand, it'll be too much, how much more should I add or is this good enough?
Since you have plenty I would say 50-to 60 lbs. Is enough and if you have a sump ditch the rest down there...Most stores would tell you one lbs. Per Gal. To start and always know your right from none to five inches tall is perfect if that's what you like and you know about build up of bacteria and nutrients in sand over heavy feedings and time...best thing treat it like a food source and finger sift it up into the water column to "feed all the tank" including removing it out of column with your filters.
 

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