Converting to Sand ( FW )

AfroCichlid

AC Members
Jan 10, 2008
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Fort Myers, FL
I love the look of sand in an aquarium, and was disappointed I hadn't started with it in my 55 gallon, now that I'm getting into plants and fish that appreciate being able to root around. Recently I had the opportunity to set my 46 gallon up for a pair of Geophagus, and so I decided to make the switch.
I searched on the interweb about how to do this, and didn't find many complete explanations. I was worried that I would have a tank full of cloudiness and broken pumps and a whole slew of nightmare possibilities. After 5 minutes or so of careful thought and consideration, I found I was already at the pool store with some pool-filter sand in my hands. A 50 lb bag was more than enough for a 46 gallon, and ran me $8.00. I am aware that a black blasting sand is made by someone somewhere, but I couldn't find any locally. I bought a 20 lb bag of Super Natural black aquarium sand ( $18! ) from my LFS.
I drained the tank into a 10 gallon cooler, and 2 5 gallon buckets ( buckets! must have buckets for this! ), and put the fish and plants into the cooler with an aerator. I vacuumed the existing gravel really well as I was draining the tank, then scooped out most of it, until there was just a real thin layer left across the bottom.
I took a 5 gal bucket and dumped about 1 parts black sand to 3 parts pool sand, and mixed it up until it was a color I was happy with. I used a hose inside the bucket, churning the sand, then dumping the small bits out, until the water in the bucket was fairly clear. I rinsed about 5 times to achieve this. I lowered the bucket into the tank, after arranging the existing gravel in the center, so it wouldn't be visible against the glass, and dumped the sand in, leveling it out. It took 2 half buckets of sand to get 2 inches of depth.
I had used my Python to drain the tank, and now I set a plate under the hose, and slowly turned the water on so there was minimal disturbance of the sand. I filled and drained the tank 4 times, vacuuming the particles and netting the debris. This part took the longest, but I wanted to make sure there were no large particles in the water column for my filters to suck up. After the 4th fill and drain, the water looked pretty clear, so I added enough Prime to treat the whole tank, and filled to 1/4 of the tank with the Python. I then started adding the tank water, I found that setting the cooler up off the ground with a chair made it easy to siphon from the tank to the cooler, and then from the cooler to a bucket when refilling. At 3/4 full, I added the decorations, plants, and fish, then filled to the top. The tank was slightly murky looking, but nothing like I had thought it would look like just after adding sand. I stuck some of the old gravel into two media bags, moved the filter media into one side of one of the HOB filters, and added the bags to the filter, since I had removed much of the bio-filtration by removing the gravel. I'm going to be testing often during the next few weeks for ammonia and nitrites, but I'm hoping I have enough bacteria in the filters ( each have been running well over 2 years ), to prevent a cycle.
Here is how the tank looks 3 hours later:

DSC00988.JPG DSC00991.JPG
 
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I'm very happy with the results, and it only took me about 2 hours to convert. My filters are running fine, and the sand doesn't kick up nearly as much cloudiness as I thought it would when I or the fish root around in it. My Geos are loving it, they're going to have my driftwood completely buried in a week at the rate their going! Anyhow, this was an easy thing to do, and I'm looking forward to converting all my tanks to sand now.
 
Looks very good!
 
Thanks for the compliments guys. I'm very pleased with this setup for the moment. Lights are next on the agenda, but it's okay with me for now.
BoredAgain-I found this tank in the woods behind an apartment complex 6 years ago. It rekindled my love for aquariums, and has been running ever since.
Plecosterone- Sand will definitely be my substrate of choice from here out. I visited your site, gorgeous tanks.
 
BoredAgain-I found this tank in the woods behind an apartment complex 6 years ago. It rekindled my love for aquariums, and has been running ever since.
Nice, and I found mine on a shelf at Petsmart, so I doubt I got the deal you did. :) And yes, sand is definitely the better choice and it's hard to go back to gravel of any kind.
 
That looks great! I love the mixed look.

I'm curious to here if you get an ammonia and/or nitrite spike with that method. I didn't think to use the filter bags of gravel when i swapped mine (-duh-) and thus had a small, one day nitrite spike.
 
I set my first sand tank in late Dec/Early Jan. I did not clean the sand prior to putting it in the tank. I went with crushed coral sand and black. An hour after I put it in the tank it looked like a milkshake. The next morning it wasn't so bad. The next day it was all good. I put a sponge insert to an Aquaclear filter over the uptake tube of my canister which I still keep on the uptake tube.

Here are the pics. 1 hour after filling the tank. The next morning. A couple of weeks later and then a couple days ago:

just filled.jpg next morning.jpg 1-23-08.jpg 4-3-2008.JPG
 
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