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Ben's 45g shallow reef


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I've decided to build a shallow reef. I've seen some amazing 'look down' type tanks that I love. I'm still finalizing what exactly I want to do in terms of the type of environment I build and fish.

 

At this point I have a Deep Blue 45g rimless 48x18x12, a 48" 6-bulb ATI T5 fixture, and a handful of powerheads. I am plumbing the tank into my display and running it off my Apex. That being said, I am in the process of plumbing it in and will be getting it wet this weekend.

 

Now all I need is a plan for aquascaping

and fish.

 

I'm open to suggestions and pictures, so please feel free to post.

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I'm open to suggestions and pictures, so please feel free to post.

 

My opinions:

 

Don't

Zip tie your light cords to your conduit hanger, if you do, at least trim the extra plastic, attempt to run it behind the conduit. That is if you're even going that route.

Do not take any plumbing techniques from your inspiration.

If you're going to have one MP, at least get another to keep all those cords from running out off the rimless tank.

 

Do

Follow the lead on the acro placement, I like how they all branch out, and seem far enough spaced for future growth.

Keep a low stock for less headache.

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Haha.  The ghetto light rack and wiring is not on my list of items to copy.  Just the aquascaping and layout. 

 

The return snorkel is pretty interesting as well.

Edited by Reefer_Madness
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My goal is also to put my cords/controllers, ATO container, and QT below the new tank. If you look at the pics below, you will see why

 

2e761bd9d517d1378db9241f05945c63.jpg

 

4dc8b1d07dc8466ffc4753f6c0ea8145.jpg

 

It should clean up my tank area. I was planning to get a small ikea cabinet to install controls in, but why do that when you can buy a new tank with cabinet?!??

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My opinions:

 

Don't

 

If you're going to have one MP, at least get another to keep all those cords from running out off the rimless tank.

:ph34r: 

 

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Ben

 

I can't wait to see what  you're going to end up with.  I recommend some pajama cardinals, which coincidently, I can sell to you....

 

Seriously though.... what's the plan? Sand, or barebottom?  Mostly SPS or mixed reef?  What fish do you have in your other tank right now?  What fish have you been dying to get?  

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Ben

 

I can't wait to see what you're going to end up with. I recommend some pajama cardinals, which coincidently, I can sell to you....

 

Seriously though.... what's the plan? Sand, or barebottom? Mostly SPS or mixed reef? What fish do you have in your other tank right now? What fish have you been dying to get?

Too many commitments! So far here is what I have decided:

 

ATI 48" T5 fixture

Medium sand bottom

Just got a 130 Gyre today

And I have one clown and a cleaner shrimp

 

That's it...

 

Planning to do mixed reef with lots of creatures (i.e. Starfish, clams, fish, etc)

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I've never had bubble tip anenomes before. How would one be in this new mixed reef? 

 

Let it cycle for a bit and then try an RBTA. With a good amount of light, and decent water params, they are really hearty from my experience. I've actually never had a tank with less than two bubble tips. 

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I'm a fan of rbta's, but they grow, and sometimes split, and can quickly take over a smaller tank. I started with one 5" rbta about a year ago in a 40B and ended up with 3, one of which was 5", another that was 8", and the largest about 12". I never really target fed them and had them under a relatively cheap reefbreeder led, and they still exploded in growth. That said, they survived a tank crash that was due to a salinity spike (ato failed while I was on vacation and salinity rose to 1.32 - didn't lose any fish but lost 90% of my corals). My clowns love them, they're incredibly attractive, and once they get comfortable you'll rarely see them move without a big change in parameters. However, when one of the splits decided to roam a bit, I lost a small colony of zoas and a hammer coral, so you have to be willing to lose some corals if the rbta gets restless. I've since sold two, so only have the 12" left. Mine also bubbled for about a month before becoming stringy and have never bubbled aside from when I removed them from the tank to sell, so you won't know if they'll be stringy or bubbly in your tank until they're in there. 

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I'm a fan of rbta's, but they grow, and sometimes split, and can quickly take over a smaller tank. I started with one 5" rbta about a year ago in a 40B and ended up with 3, one of which was 5", another that was 8", and the largest about 12". I never really target fed them and had them under a relatively cheap reefbreeder led, and they still exploded in growth. That said, they survived a tank crash that was due to a salinity spike (ato failed while I was on vacation and salinity rose to 1.32 - didn't lose any fish but lost 90% of my corals). My clowns love them, they're incredibly attractive, and once they get comfortable you'll rarely see them move without a big change in parameters. However, when one of the splits decided to roam a bit, I lost a small colony of zoas and a hammer coral, so you have to be willing to lose some corals if the rbta gets restless. I've since sold two, so only have the 12" left. Mine also bubbled for about a month before becoming stringy and have never bubbled aside from when I removed them from the tank to sell, so you won't know if they'll be stringy or bubbly in your tank until they're in there.

Thanks for the info. That's exactly the feedback I was looking for. If I had a way of trapping one on a rock by itself that would be sweet, but I plan to have a few colonies and I would hate to push it. I would hate even more to lose a coral because of an "itchy foot".

 

Do they let go and float when they are moving or do they crawl? I ask because maybe I could put a pillar rock that is surrounded by sand. I assume it wouldn't crawl down away from the light. Maybe that would keep him on that one rock? Keep in mind I have no idea what I am talking about but just trying to apply logic to Mother Nature.

 

Thoughts?

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Mine never floated to another spot before the split, it always crawled, and one of the ways I kept them relatively stable was to separate the rock work into two sections and keep the nems on one side. That said, when it split, I had no idea it had done so, and the clone walked or floated over the sandy area to the other side, which is how I lost the zoas and hammer. You could probably isolate it in a corner by giving it a rock pile to itself separated from the rest of the corals by sand (a pile because mine always likes to keep its foot in a dark area - not sure if this is universal or just the ones I've had). My remaining rbta has stayed in the same place for about 8 months, so they do tend to find a spot and hunker down so long as they're not disturbed too much and the water is stable. Again, my remaining rbta began as a pathetic 3-4" split with a droppy mouth that seemed like it wasn't going to survive and is now a solid 12" when fully expanded during the light cycles, so keep growth in mind. You could always get a 2-3" colorful nem and see how you feel about it after a few months. One positive is that they're pretty easy to resell if you decide you don't want it.

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Looking good there. so what skimmer are you using for this one?

I actually tied it into my display 60g cube. I have a Vertex 130 taking care of both. I may need to upsize at some point.

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You could always get a 2-3" colorful nem and see how you feel about it after a few months. One positive is that they're pretty easy to resell if you decide you don't want it.

Good idea. I may give that a try. In a look down I think this would be awesome.

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Can your skimmer handle 60g display + sump and then this frag tank? is it small for them?

I've read it does great up to about 110g my net volume is about 125g. We'll see!!

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