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MotoFish

MotoFish's First Salt Water Tank

Rating: 2 votes, 4.00 average.
Well, first let me start off with a big thank you to a few people who have helped me get the grasp and understanding of what I am diving into.. Those few people that I'd really like to mention are Jessy, SDguy (Peter), Nick_Kun, SDFishman (Justin), Rudy, and nahtanoj (Jonathan) all of whom (whether they knew it or not) have helped me out tremendously in my quest to start up this endeavor. All of whom I met thru SDReefs.

I also want to say thank you to my fiancée who has been very supportive of my desire to build this tank. Thanks love! I love you!

A little about me.. I've been a certified diver for many years. Have many dives under my belt from tropical waters mostly in the Caribbean and mostly off the shores of Cozumel, Mexico.. I have had a few freshwater tanks in the past, thanks to my Uncle whom spent most of his adult life living in the Virgin Islands and Trinidad and Tobago.. RIP Uncle Joe, I love you. Also the same man that tought me to ride motorcycles.. Hence the name. Anyways, back to me.. I've always had an appreciation for the underwater world, and finally, I am building my own little piece of it. I started out about a year ago by signing on to SDReefs.. I would read thread after thread. Ask question after question. I started attending the monthly meetings.. all the while learning as much as I could to know that I would not just have another salt water tank, but to have something that is much more than just a salt water tank.. I want my slice of the ocean, my slice of the reefs and fish I love to dive to see.

Here is the start of the scenes that have been ingrained into my memory. Scenes from my own experiences. The visions of those scenes, replicated to reproduce what I found extremely fascinating.

So without further ado, here is my first reef tank..

MotoFish's Reef

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ID:	974A front view

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ID:	976and a back view..

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ID:	975The stock plumbing as it came with the tank..

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ID:	988The redesigned plumbing, hoping to utilize some of that knowledge I have picked up in the past year.

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ID:	984A new skimmer!

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ID:	977and some new rock...!

I opted to build this tank from scratch, using all new stuff (for the most part) some stuff is used, but as far as the tank goes, I am trying to set it up and know exactly what is in there.. No unwanted pests to destroy my hard work! I'm new to all of this and am trying to go slow and learn and know exactly what I am doing through every step of the way..

So here goes.. My first time ever aquascaping.. It took days. It went thru a couple iterations, it got my fiancée, and my own votes of approval. Together we found what we think is going to look magnificent in our home when it truely comes to life!

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ID:	983A first go at the final layout.. It got changed.

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ID:	985Here was the second and the final layout we opted to go with. Here's some close ups of this layout..

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ID:	990The back left..

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ID:	982The back right..

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ID:	981The front left..

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ID:	989and the front right..

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ID:	986Some top down pics.. left side.

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ID:	978and right side.

Most of this layout came from visions in my head of one of my favorite dives.. The Palancar Wall.. If you have ever dove the site.. You can relate. I remembered working my way down thru the reef, getting deeper and deeper as I went. There were many cracks and crevices to swim thru and around. Ultimately coming out of the reef and near the 120 foot mark, led me to be suspended over a 3000 foot underwater cliff that seemed to just go straight down into the darkness of the ocean. It was truely an amazing feeling to feel so small in such a vastness of water. I of course hurriedly swam back into the safety of the reef, but it was that dive that inspired this rock formation. Minus the 3000 foot cliff of course. My tank is only 18" deep..<-- The hissyfit icon seemed very fitting here!

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ID:	980So the RO/DI unit showed up on Monday and I immeadiately had to get it going.. I filled the tank with pure RO/DI water and added salt afterwards, slowly to the overflow, bringing salinity up to par.

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ID:	979A view from the back.. ultimately this will get a piece of black vinyl applied to the outside of the tank, just where the overflow section is, to hide the plumbing.. But for now, you can see the water level in the tank sitting about an inch higher than the water level in the overflow. There is no pipe for the return water, it flows directly down thru the bulkhead fitting and around the 3/4" pvc sticking up thru the middle (my backup drain).. Before I built this new drain system, during initial water tests, my fiancée asked "Is it always going to be this loud?" as of this morning, (finished filling the tank about 1:30 am last night) with new drain operative, she says "Is it even running?" to which I answered "Yes!"

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ID:	987A picture of it near full.. It is completely full now and up and cycling..

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Categories
Tank Entry , ‎ Tank - Full Summary

Comments

  1. Jessy's Avatar
    Sweet! Thanks so much for coming over and letting us see your tank. I really like it. Is it a Solana? I really love the look of having a tank visible from both sides like this. Glad you didn't go so elaborate as your first tank design when I met you :P. This is going to be great to watch you grow finally. It's been a long time coming. Am I missing it? What kind of lighting are you going to do?
  2. bleachandvomit's Avatar
    Woah, thats a super sharp rimless, who made it? And is there any difference in flow with the return tee'd off like that? Just curious, thanks for sharing!

    Doh! just realized thats a Solana XL 67!
    Updated 03-17-2010 at 03:37 PM by bleachandvomit
  3. MotoFish's Avatar
    You are correct bleach.. It's the XL 67.. I have had many compliments on it.

    As far as the return being tee'd.. I have not tested it to see if there is any difference with or without the tee. To be honest, I think the pump is a little oversized for this application and even if it is reducing flow, then all the better. I would prefer to have it cut back even a little more possibly and have plans to stick a couple Vortech's in there in time. Maybe a pair of MP10's.

    Jessy, as stated, yes, it is the Solana by Current.. I actually have 3 sides viewable, one of the sides gives you quite a good view with some real depth to it! Looking thru that low iron glass too! Bummer they didn't do the back with low iron as well.. As far as the lighting goes, the Solana is supposed to come with their Sunpod 2 x 250 watt HQI Metal Halide with white and blue LED's, but unfortunately, I don't have that to go with it. Maybe for the better though because I am trying to go as energy efficient as possible. I have 4 T5 retro's that I need to build a canopy for. I may opt to put a 3rd set of T5's in there, but for now, we are going to go with the 4 bulbs. The canopy, I am going to try myself to do, and try to match Current's gorgeous stand.. We will see how good an engineer can be at being a craftsman..
  4. VitalApparatuz's Avatar
    Are you going to add any live rock or are you going all base rock?
    Thats gonna be one gorgeous tank!
  5. MotoFish's Avatar
    I was originally intending on seeding with a few pounds of live rock, but now not so sure. I might just let it all happen on it's own. I know there are lots of "good" creatures I could stand to gain by seeding with live rock, but then I have to ask.. How many "pests" do I introduce to my system as well..

    I am considering trying Instant Oceans Bio-Spira... http://instantocean.com/sites/instan...ra_splash.html

    I have been up and running almost 48 hours now.. I have introduced no source of Ammonia as of yet.. I got a baseline on my tests last night (24 hours) into cycle.. everything was near zero. I used all dry rock and sand, no die off from uncured rock, to cause ammonia spikes.. Aside from not having any bacteria in the tank to support denitrification from any ammonia source (fish poop) I don't expect a huge swing in parameters. I am going to see where the levels all sit tonight, possibly add a small ammonia source and see what happens.. Then add some Bio-Spira and see what happens again. I may be adding a fish by the end of the weekend.
  6. bleachandvomit's Avatar
    are you trying to skip a cycle or something?
  7. Jessy's Avatar
    Quote Originally Posted by MotoFish
    I was originally intending on seeding with a few pounds of live rock, but now not so sure. I might just let it all happen on it's own. I know there are lots of "good" creatures I could stand to gain by seeding with live rock, but then I have to ask.. How many "pests" do I introduce to my system as well..
    I am a huge proponent of biodiversity in a tank. You need that diversity to mimic a real reef. Nothing in nature is clean or steril. You really don't have to worry about very many "baddies" coming in on rock. If you don't get mantis shrimp all the other stuff (minus algaes) is great for a reef. Bristle worms are good scavengers, pods and stuff are food for the reef. I'd suggest going to the LFS and picking out a good 2-3 rocks that are purple and covered in coraline. Then I'd go to someone's tank on SDR that you know doesn't have ich or other diseases currently and get a cup of sand to seed your sandbed.

    I also highly recommend this place http://www.ipsf.com/refugiumstartup.html Their packages of sand start up and other things are great for getting a reef with diversity. DaveMorris got me started with these guys. If I were starting a reef tank up again, I'd try and get some chaeto from someone's tank that had a ton of pods. Put that, the rock, the sand, and a pack from this ipsf.com site and let my tank sit for a month or two. Allow the pods and other critters to build up to a healthy population before I introduce predators like fish.
  8. MotoFish's Avatar
    No, not trying to skip one, just ease thru a small one.. I don't see my tank having a large ammonia spike if I don't cause one.. And if this Bio-Spira does what it says it does..