I love fishkeeping!
I love the fact that fishkeepers can find a way to keep fish(in this case invertebrates) in any circumstances, and you can find people who'll help you do it! So, basically, what you all are saying is research, research, and more research? I need to check my levels specifically. I, also, need to, possibly add more equipment(I was planning on using the canister for carbon, have it, and phosphate removal media, coming tomorrow, and maybe nix the HOB, I was considering changing it out in favor of the fuge, maybe at a later date), and get testing equipment(TDS meter, which I've been looking into, but thought that was only useful for RO/DI water testing, and that regular tapwater would be too high in dissolved solids to be of any use), phospate, and the usual reef test kits. Incidentally, are there any, relatively, inexpensive, but workable electronic Ph meters? It'd be nice to be able to do quick, mess free tests, which will be often. The fuge would end up being a aquatraders.com fuge, if I go that route. I received my protein skimmers, today. They barely fit on my tank, which is a standard 75, All-Glass tank. No Copper has been used in my tank. The waste water from thwe tank isn't the real problem, it's the fact that RO/DI's waste water producing pure water(70% water waste is common). I would not want to just do top-off's. My discus did well, as well as oto's, rams, angelfish, and a bunch of other fish in the well water. We do filter our drinking water, however, it is a slow process, and goes through a UV filter as well as carbon, and tastes way better than the straight well water. I, really, can't use this filter for the tank. It's expensive, and I would not be allowed to uss it for this purpose(although, it might be helpful to get some king of tapwater filter.) Would running the water through carbon, previous to putting it in the tank be helpful? I guess, at this point I should just see how things go, and test my water. Pretty much, the only thing I need to buy is live rock, and two powerheads. I still plan to upgrade the lights, in case I decide to try LPS corals at some point. I figure, the soft corals wouldn't mind the added light, and I can keep them low or in lower light areas, if they do. Any other comments would be helpful, and suggestions are always appreciated. Really, I have no one to turn to for advice around here, and I'm, totally, new to reef, and inexperienced with salt(I really should say unsuccessful with salt, since I could barely keep anything alive
). I hope, to order my live rock next month, and have the tank all set up by then. Thanks! Any other concerns I should be made aware of?
I love the fact that fishkeepers can find a way to keep fish(in this case invertebrates) in any circumstances, and you can find people who'll help you do it! So, basically, what you all are saying is research, research, and more research? I need to check my levels specifically. I, also, need to, possibly add more equipment(I was planning on using the canister for carbon, have it, and phosphate removal media, coming tomorrow, and maybe nix the HOB, I was considering changing it out in favor of the fuge, maybe at a later date), and get testing equipment(TDS meter, which I've been looking into, but thought that was only useful for RO/DI water testing, and that regular tapwater would be too high in dissolved solids to be of any use), phospate, and the usual reef test kits. Incidentally, are there any, relatively, inexpensive, but workable electronic Ph meters? It'd be nice to be able to do quick, mess free tests, which will be often. The fuge would end up being a aquatraders.com fuge, if I go that route. I received my protein skimmers, today. They barely fit on my tank, which is a standard 75, All-Glass tank. No Copper has been used in my tank. The waste water from thwe tank isn't the real problem, it's the fact that RO/DI's waste water producing pure water(70% water waste is common). I would not want to just do top-off's. My discus did well, as well as oto's, rams, angelfish, and a bunch of other fish in the well water. We do filter our drinking water, however, it is a slow process, and goes through a UV filter as well as carbon, and tastes way better than the straight well water. I, really, can't use this filter for the tank. It's expensive, and I would not be allowed to uss it for this purpose(although, it might be helpful to get some king of tapwater filter.) Would running the water through carbon, previous to putting it in the tank be helpful? I guess, at this point I should just see how things go, and test my water. Pretty much, the only thing I need to buy is live rock, and two powerheads. I still plan to upgrade the lights, in case I decide to try LPS corals at some point. I figure, the soft corals wouldn't mind the added light, and I can keep them low or in lower light areas, if they do. Any other comments would be helpful, and suggestions are always appreciated. Really, I have no one to turn to for advice around here, and I'm, totally, new to reef, and inexperienced with salt(I really should say unsuccessful with salt, since I could barely keep anything alive
