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sde219

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Posts posted by sde219

  1. I've seen pairs - usually resulting from two leaving a larger group. It is usually very difficult to force a pair in a tank. IME, 65g is large enough to have an odd numbered group but depending on how territorial the existing one is, you might not have luck adding any number. If you rearrange the rockwork or temporarily remove the current one, my guess is you could add additional firefish but I think it'll prove fairly difficult.

  2. water are pretty much clean. all are 0, except for nitrate which is around 10-20. last few fish i've added before the out break was pair of black clowns, and a black and white heniochus. The clowns are fine, the heniochus are severly infected., my blue hippo got a little, my powder brown had a little, but seems to be ok now. my onyx is having an outbreak now. he's been in there for 3-4 months now. no reason he should have an outbreak of ick. i've stopped feeding the live, only flakes, pellets and frozen, and sheets. and only moon light is on. seems to calm the fish down when there is no light.

     

    oh i've also added activated carbon.

     

    IME, there is a reason that your onyx should have ick - you just added a severely infected Heniochus. Maybe I'm screwed up on my pathology but it just takes one infected fish to result is a tank outbreak and unless all fish are well-fed and unstressed, it's likely to keep resurfacing. Depending on the severity and you setup I would try to minimize stress, keep well fed, keep good parameters and stop adding fish until the outbreak stops.

  3. It's a pipe with a slit down the middle that sits inside the tank. Water flows into the slit, down the pipe and into the sump. It's supposed to be dead quiet and amazing at surface skimming. It also is said to have very little suction so no fish get stuck.

     

    But what about the climb over the top of the tank? I get how a siphon might do it but not sure how it would work otherwise.

  4. The regular ACIII doesn't let you track power consumption - I don't know about the pro.

     

    I have the new Apex, and I can see on the graph what each thing is using and for how long (ie. how long it is on). I like that feature. Plus it lets me know if I am in the ballpark or a little close to what the circuit is rated for as far as amperage consumption.

     

    That's definitely a major plus for the Apex for me. KW are a little more expensive in WI so I'll want to conserve as much as possible plus we'll be trying to add some solar and wind generation to the property so knowing my usage is key.

  5. Get the new APEX, check with your LFS for stock as they are hard to get.....

     

    Can you elaborate? I've heard fantastic things about the Apex but it seems like as people buy the Apex, the ACIII and ACIII pro will be a relative bargain used. What are the major advantages of the Apex?

  6. Your question started off with testing water quality then into controller such as ACIII.

     

    Basic test kits that you need to have on hand:

     

    1. Ammonia test kit

    2. Nitrite test kit

    3. Nitrate test kit

    4. pH test kit

     

    Test kits that are necessary for salt water

    1. Calcium test kit

    2. Magnesium test kit

    3. Alk test kit

     

    I personally feel that a good controller is an investment in the hobby. Controller like the ACIII and Apex can monitor and help you maintain your tank's temp, monitor your tank's pH level, controls the lights, fans, etc. What it doesn't do is check your tank's ammonia, nitrite, nitrate, etc level.

     

    I should have been more clear. I've definitely been bad at testing all things but I was more specifically referring to being aware of the pH and perhaps looking for temperature changes - I've long wanted to know how much or if my heater is turning on during a regular day.

     

    I guess because I've never encountered overheating issues and the like. I'm a little curious if the control functions are a huge bonus. For lighting, I've always had success with the timers I've used. Certainly, it seems like the control and way some controllers work with the pumps seems pretty helpful but at the same time, the Tunze controller has always provided that service for me.

     

    At the same time, I love the constant monitoring afforded by these systems.

     

     

    The last thing that you need to have is an ATO (Auto Top Off). As your tank's water evaporate and it will, the ATO can keep your tank's water level constant, and thus less fluctuation in the salinity, etc. You can ofcourse not have an ATO but that would require you to manually refill your sump througout the day but that gets old and frustrating very quickly.

     

    I'll definitely be using an ATO. Is there any reason to run that through the controller except as a failsafe?

  7. I've always been terrible about testing water quality. And I've never really used a controller. Neither of these were issues because I never had particularly difficult corals and things seemed to always work out.

     

    I'm hoping to take a step up in sophistication but I'm trying to understand the exact purpose and use of controllers. I get that it allows for computerized control of your lighting, heating, fans, and pumps. Also, it could provide reports and tracking of temp and other vitals.

     

    I've heard something about the controller allowing you to track power consumption (this would be a huge plus for me).

     

    Can anyone give me some more details on these devices? Let's pretend I know nothing about them.

     

    I'm leaning towards getting a ACIII or ACIII Pro because so many are coming on the market as people upgrade to the Apex. Would I be foolish to buy one when something simpler might do?

  8. Since I had meetings in Richmond today I made a point of stopping by Fish World, and I totally blame you for the fact that I needed a large cooler for the drive home and actually did spend a few hours there..... :blush:

     

    Glad to hear that the recommendation hit the mark. It's a really great store. I'm have tempted to drive down to Richmond again before moving out of the area and I don't even have a tank to put anything in.

     

    Anything to add to the comments? I really was blind to the coral selection when I entered the shop. His displays were too impressive.

  9. Thanks helm but I am talking south of the beltway on 95 all the way to richmond. I would say no further then 10 miles off 95.

     

    What about shops in Richmond? There are a few there.

     

    I don't think you'll find much right off 95 on the drive or for that matter probably within 30 miles of 95 along the drive. Maybe a few small stores with a SW tank.

  10. I had some time to kill on Saturday and I took a swing through what seemed to be the three largest saltwater stores in Richmond. Here are my thoughts. Keep in mind, this is just my impressions and was based on visits lasting between 20-40 minutes.

     

     

    Richmond Aquarium - 3645 Speeks Dr, Midlothian, VA (no website I could find)

    -Pretty underwhelming store with a few pleasant touches. Staff(2 people actively with customers) were helpful but there wasn't much to check out. It kind of seemed like the extension of a hobbyists garage and a tank maintenance business. They did however has some nice fish in stock - a few angels and triggers I would not consider regular finds. Seemed to sell a lot of used systems although the prices weren't exactly indicative of the used status. The physical space was across three or four units in a warehouse complex basically as big as like 10 car garage. Not a whole lot of inverts or coral but some and it looked decent.

    I'll give it 1 of 4 stars.

    If you're in the near neighborhood, might be worth a visit otherwise though save your gas. It'd basically say it's nothing more than a warehouse version of Wallys.

     

     

    Atlantis Aquarium - http://www.atlantisva.com

    - Nice store, high end equipment on the their tanks with coral for sale. Full Deltec setup on a display tank. Had some ORA frags. Decent selection of fish - probably slightly less tanks of fish for sale than Pristine Aquarium (saltwater portion) or BRK. Nothing really jumped out at me but everything was very clean. They did have a pretty large quantity of coral for sale. While I was there it seemed 3-4 employees went in and out, only one was really on the sales floor. Probably 3 customers stopped in over the course of my visit - most for water. None of the employees were particularly chatty but I wasn't exactly seeking out conversation. This shop definitely stocks the high-end manufacturers and certainly displays their products. They have some very nice acrylic shallow tanks for coral sales. They seemed to have a QT system and also holding tanks for fish from maintenance tanks in the rear. This store doesn't really seem comparable to any setup in the DC Metro Area but perhaps seemed like Pristine Aquariums (in terms of size and cleaniness) but with a particular emphasis on high-end consumers. I didn't take a close look at prices but more than anything it means they probably weren't particularly high or low.

    I'll go 2.5 of 4 stars on this. Nice enough that I would probably stop by regularly if it were near by but I'm not sure I'd go out of my way for it.

     

     

    Fish World - http://www.fishworldric.com/

    - I can't say enough good things about this place. I think I'd recommend that anyone traveling to or through Richmond consider a brief(good luck!) stop. Honestly, I could have spent a few hours there.

     

    The fact that there were 1200g, 900g, 450g, and three or four 120-250g displays was unbelievable - those are display volume numbers. The 1200 was something like 8x4x5. It was truly a daunting tank. Outside of public aquariums (and even including some), I've never seen a more impressive single display. It had probably 15 tangs, a clam at least 30" in length, and a monti cap that seemed to be about 24-30" in diameter and at least four tiers and 18" tall. The 900 display was really eye opening - it's size was almost deceptive, seemingly appropriate for a hobbyist but also overwhelming as you worked your way around it. I think I totalled over 5000 watts of lighting on the two largest systems alone.

     

    Fish World also had the single largest variety of fish that I've seen outside of stores that deal in wholesale or ship fish as a large portion of their business. Pretty solid mix of common fish and a lot of the less common but desirable fish (6 blue spotted jawfish, at least two each of sargassum, pink-tailed, blue-throat triggers). Every two tanks of fish for sale are run on individual sump setups. That seems likely a potentially costly and labor intensive approach but also means the risk for the spread of disease was nicely curtailed.

     

    I honestly didn't look at the inverts and corals for sale very closely. They seemed to have a nice variety. Assuming the pricing on the fish is indicative, I suspect they were pretty fairly marked particularly for the quality of the care provided.

     

    Both of the employees in the store were amazingly helpful. Joe, who owns the place, showed me a book of the custom systems he's done. If I ever stop enjoying the DIY stuff, I'll give him a call. It's my understanding that he's done a large variety of custom installations all over the country including some very nearly fully automated setups. The other employee, Cody(I think?) was completely enthusiastic and sought out answers to every question I had even ones I probably shouldn't have asked.

     

    The store seemed to have a pretty good system of drygoods also. I didn't look much because the living stuff was too distracting. Just to keep from being too laudatory, their website is as good as one would hope.

     

    4 of 4 stars for me and worthwhile place to stop because there is a enough to enjoy that kids, wives, and others will be entertained and perhaps not see the cash changing hands.

  11. Hi all,

    I lived in Burke, and just bought a house in Falls Church. I need to move my 46gal tank. Can some one in the area of either Burke or Falls Church (7 corner) help me out this weekend or next weekend?

    Thanks a lot in advance.

    Tea

     

    I can help. Just give a time frame this Sunday 10-4 and next Sat am are my only bad times.

     

    Thanks,

    Steve

  12. Hey Johnny:

     

    Are you still holding one of these for me? If not no problem I've been swamped and when I finally borrowed a truck and drove out there, you had already cleaned up the old location and moved it (entirely my fault for being two weeks behind).

     

    Hope all is well with the new spot. I'm looking forward to dropping by again soon.

     

    Steve

  13. Look up www.glass-holes.com that should do the trick.

    David

     

    Have you used their saws? Any idea about the quality of saws and how long they last for? I'm trying to get a little more feedback rather than jump at the cheap ones. Ebay has a ton too.

  14. I'm looking to drill holes for a 1/2" Bulkhead (2) and 3/4" Bulkhead (2). I doubt these are the only holes I will ever drill. I suspect I'll use the 1/2" quite a bit more. I know our LFSes carry these and I can order them online. Any guidance on the best quality/price? I see websites (North Coast Marine selling "high use" ones but I'm skeptical because I know most people don't advise using them nearly that much. Any feedback on the matter is welcome!

     

     

    On a side note, anyone up for helping with this over the weekend of the 20th/21st? Anyone else need holes drilled? I'd consider clearing some space in my garage and grabbing some beverages if there is interest in a little drilling party? Obviously I'd be partial to the schedule of those with skills.

  15. minus 3 for Lazars' - funeral that day.

     

    Would be great if someone could video speaker, post his presentation or both. Jon was really looking forward to this meeting, sorry we'll miss it.

     

    If someone wants to do this but doesn't have a camera, let me know. I can loan out my camera since I can't make it (reserve duty).

  16. One or two small pieces is fine, just rinse it well first. If you want to add a lot, like more than 10 lbs, then you should spray it out with a hose, then soak it in fresh water for a few weeks, changing the water every few days. Expect a slight algae bloom when you put the new rock in.

     

    +1, giving the rock a good flush and soak is a smart move. Unless you know how the rock was dried/cleaned - it could have a lot of dried salt and detritus on it.

  17. Any trigger you put in a 30gal tank will outgrow that tank in no time. I personally would just go with one larger tank, but that's me. I've seen people do the multiple small tanks type of setup, and just about everyone ends up consolidating to one larger tank eventually.

     

    I would also reconsider the 400watt halide over a tank that small. You'd have some serious overheating issues.

     

    Multiple tanks is a virtual necessity to me because of the species I'd like to keep. One larger tank isn't really an option at this point. Otherwise I'd be looking for a 120g-180g but that's the plan for the future. Probably somewhere around 2 years from now.

     

    It's my experience that some triggers grow slower than others and a trigger between 1-2" at purchase should be good for at least 18 months. I'd probably find him a new home at that point. I certainly recognize the concern though - this is probably the most uncertain aspect of the upgrade plan.

     

    I'm not even remotely committed to the 400w - it's why I'm asking for some feedback on the visual with two tanks with different lighting needs. I'm most inclined to go with two 250w pendants but i hate to waste energy and 250w over softies and live rock is overkill. Although, in my opinion, a 400w Halide over about 95 gallons - total system volume isn't likely to overheat the tank - lots of heat exchange in the setup. The ambient temperature is around 64 degrees in the room.

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