Hello,
I have a 50 48"x13"x18" tank that I planted. I am currently running one DIY CO2 reactor with a custom lighting setup. The tank had 2 18" t8 15 watt bulbs which obviously isnt enough to grow much of anything. Everything in this tank has been done on a budget which is why I resorted to custom lighting. I took two white vinyl rain gutters and placed a modified light fixture in each that has two spiral CFL 23 w 65000k bulbs in each. I vented the vinyl and placed it directly against the glass lid. I bought a light timer and have it set to 12/12 currently. My substrate is pool filter sand.
Currently I have 1 anacharis bunch, 1 amazon sword, 1 bunch of microsword, Javamoss clumps 1 giant moss ball, 1 anubias nana attached to driftwood and several hygrophilla angustafloria plants. PH 7.2 gh 150 and kh120.
I staked the sword, the hygrophilla and the microsword with slow release fert stakes and dose twice a week with api leaf zone 0-0-3.
Everything except for the hygrophilla seems to be flourishing under the current setup. The hygrophilla has sprouted roots from the stems and seems to be placing roots in the subtrate but only has modest growth on the leaves. I have read that hygrophilla is a fast grower. Should I be more patient and wait for it to take off or is my lighting not sufficient? I was also thinking of pulling the microsword and trying baby tears as it is readily available at my LFS but wanted to be sure my lighting would support it. I have also read that HC is much better as a carpet type of plant as it grows much faster.
The lighting does run a bit hot, but luckily its not hot here in Texas yet and I have a in canopy DIY DC fan solution in the works. Tank currently stays around 82-84F.
I only seem to have modest algae growth, nothing that the otos and endlers cant seem to take care of.
Any suggestions or advice is appreciated.
Stocking is as follows
1x Apisto Cacatuoides
2x Blue Ram Cichilids
4x panda corydoras
12x neon tetras
6x endler's livebearers
2x otocinclus
2x medium sized mystery snails
1x ghost shrip
I have a 50 48"x13"x18" tank that I planted. I am currently running one DIY CO2 reactor with a custom lighting setup. The tank had 2 18" t8 15 watt bulbs which obviously isnt enough to grow much of anything. Everything in this tank has been done on a budget which is why I resorted to custom lighting. I took two white vinyl rain gutters and placed a modified light fixture in each that has two spiral CFL 23 w 65000k bulbs in each. I vented the vinyl and placed it directly against the glass lid. I bought a light timer and have it set to 12/12 currently. My substrate is pool filter sand.
Currently I have 1 anacharis bunch, 1 amazon sword, 1 bunch of microsword, Javamoss clumps 1 giant moss ball, 1 anubias nana attached to driftwood and several hygrophilla angustafloria plants. PH 7.2 gh 150 and kh120.
I staked the sword, the hygrophilla and the microsword with slow release fert stakes and dose twice a week with api leaf zone 0-0-3.
Everything except for the hygrophilla seems to be flourishing under the current setup. The hygrophilla has sprouted roots from the stems and seems to be placing roots in the subtrate but only has modest growth on the leaves. I have read that hygrophilla is a fast grower. Should I be more patient and wait for it to take off or is my lighting not sufficient? I was also thinking of pulling the microsword and trying baby tears as it is readily available at my LFS but wanted to be sure my lighting would support it. I have also read that HC is much better as a carpet type of plant as it grows much faster.
The lighting does run a bit hot, but luckily its not hot here in Texas yet and I have a in canopy DIY DC fan solution in the works. Tank currently stays around 82-84F.
I only seem to have modest algae growth, nothing that the otos and endlers cant seem to take care of.
Any suggestions or advice is appreciated.
Stocking is as follows
1x Apisto Cacatuoides
2x Blue Ram Cichilids
4x panda corydoras
12x neon tetras
6x endler's livebearers
2x otocinclus
2x medium sized mystery snails
1x ghost shrip