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- Dec 10, 2017
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Guys, I know there are lots of threads out there on this topic but everybody seems to have different opinions (as most of things on this hobby )... I'm just throwing my thoughts out there and looking for your input.. any help is greatly appreciated!
I have an established (about 7 months old) 40 gallon with some LPS and 5 fish. Recently I got a dirty cheap 75 gallon on black Friday and got that set up. New dry sand, new 40lb of dry rock and 20 gallon sump. Filled it with water, got the salinity and temperature right and it's running for 5 days now. Haven't done anything in regards of cycling, so no existing bacteria. My plan is:
1) remove about 50% of the water from the new, non-cycled, tank and store on a bin
2) transfer about 75% of the water from the old tank to the new one (only to help matching pH and chemistry)
3) transfer all the live rock from the 40 gallon (about 30lb before cured) over to the 75 gallon (they stand only a couple of feet apart) and work quickly on the aquascape
4) Transfer 1 or 2 cups of old sand from 40 gallon over to new tank and let it settle down for some minutes - maybe not even necessary?
5) transfer all the corals, CUC and fish at once to the new tank (about 30 to 45 minutes after live rock has been transferred), let them acclimate on a plastic bag
6) top off with water from the bin and save the rest for first water change
7) transfer current canister filter from 40 gallon to new tank for a couple of days to help the bacteria spread out? Or move media from canister to sump?
Note: should I pour in a bottle of Dr Tim's in between steps 2 and 3 for safety? I know there's a lot of back and forth wether it works, but more bacteria can't be bad, right? Or would it crash with the existing bacteria?
I want the fish and corals to suffer less stress possible (I guess we all want that).
I got a Seneye and will keep an eye out for spikes of ammonia during the first weeks... not adding new live stock to the tank for a while, just creating a better environment for the current ones...
Thanks in advance for any ideas you might have!
I have an established (about 7 months old) 40 gallon with some LPS and 5 fish. Recently I got a dirty cheap 75 gallon on black Friday and got that set up. New dry sand, new 40lb of dry rock and 20 gallon sump. Filled it with water, got the salinity and temperature right and it's running for 5 days now. Haven't done anything in regards of cycling, so no existing bacteria. My plan is:
1) remove about 50% of the water from the new, non-cycled, tank and store on a bin
2) transfer about 75% of the water from the old tank to the new one (only to help matching pH and chemistry)
3) transfer all the live rock from the 40 gallon (about 30lb before cured) over to the 75 gallon (they stand only a couple of feet apart) and work quickly on the aquascape
4) Transfer 1 or 2 cups of old sand from 40 gallon over to new tank and let it settle down for some minutes - maybe not even necessary?
5) transfer all the corals, CUC and fish at once to the new tank (about 30 to 45 minutes after live rock has been transferred), let them acclimate on a plastic bag
6) top off with water from the bin and save the rest for first water change
7) transfer current canister filter from 40 gallon to new tank for a couple of days to help the bacteria spread out? Or move media from canister to sump?
Note: should I pour in a bottle of Dr Tim's in between steps 2 and 3 for safety? I know there's a lot of back and forth wether it works, but more bacteria can't be bad, right? Or would it crash with the existing bacteria?
I want the fish and corals to suffer less stress possible (I guess we all want that).
I got a Seneye and will keep an eye out for spikes of ammonia during the first weeks... not adding new live stock to the tank for a while, just creating a better environment for the current ones...
Thanks in advance for any ideas you might have!