I am somewhere in the middle on this one.
I don't have any problem with someone stating their opinion, but saltwater8, every time you dissent with someone, it always comes off sounding pretty harsh. I am not trying to flame you, but try to be kind when posting a reply. People have come here for advice, and if you continue to be as harash as you will, they will just go elsewhere. We don't want to begin to look like other reef forums on the web...
. Saltwaterfish.com is a nice, informative place where people can post their questions and concerns without feeling below anyone.
I am very happy that you are trying to educate other people, and it is always good to refer to experts on topics, but the experts are not the end-all and be-all every time. Plus, there are MANY experts out there. For instance, Bang Guy posted something from a clownfish expert that is probably not known to many people. Thus, state your opinion, and let it go. It only gets worse and people stop listening when you begin to argue and rant.
Instead of beginning your post,
"UMMM... NO!"
You could say something like, "In my opinion, two clownfish in a 10 gallon tank won't work very well long term." That would be a much nicer way of saying things.
Then, instead of using absolutes, like,
"There is NO use for a 10 gallon tank in the saltwater fish hobby, unless like someone said, it is used as a sump"
You could say, "I think the best use for a 10 gallon tank is a sump." Obviously, there are other uses for a 10 gallon tank, as stated by CELCANThr (Quarantine tanks, Nano tanks, Tanks for Hippocampus zosterae, Grow-out tanks, Frag tanks, Food growing tanks). When you say something like you did, you come off sounding aragant and flat-out wrong.
On the other hand though, I really do not agree with putting large active fish in a small tank. One member mentioned a porcupine puffer in a 29 gallon tank. This is not the same thing at all. A porcupine puffer gets 18 inches. I am sure you could see why a 29 gallon tank would not work for an 18 inch fish. Because a 29 gallon tank is 30 inches long and 12 inches wide, there is no way a fish that size could move in a 29 gallon tank, or a 55 gallon tank, or a 75 gallon tank for that matter.