I usually dont post much, because I dont know much, but this post seems to remind me of my earlier questions and I would like to respond. When half the people tell you that you can do it and the other half tell you that you can not, than it is up to you. This is what happened to me, and I finally decided to take a cautious experimental approach. I do not reccomend this to you, for if you are looking to save money and dont like to take risks than listen to sammy. However, Sammystingray should not be telling you to disregard Garf. That seems to be one of the best sights on the subject, they take a scientiffic approach, and they are a widely published place. They have pictures of all types of corals growing under 120 watts of light over a 55 gallon. If you go to the part of the site that is entitled "recipe", it describes the set up of a new 55 gallon. He not only puts in corals but a clam after 15 days of setup, and the lights ae not upgraded on this tank EVER. I am not saying to go nuts and buy all you can, but why not try it. What do you have to lose, 30 bucks. You have like 1.7 watts of light and that should be fine as long as you keep to certain corals. You wont be able to keep a variety of corals but mushrooms leathers, and polyps might live if they are getting good exposure. Take it slow. Get 1, then if it lives get another. If it dies, buy some more fish until you can upgrade. Each aquarium is different, and all the specimens that go in the tank are different. I realize I am a mere damsel who might not have a million posts and you have no reason to take my advice. However, this is because I listen more than I talk. I will tell you something that I do know for sure from reading these posts religiously for the past 3 months. All the information on this site is in a constant loop. A person hears a piece of information and tells it to 5 people who in turn tell it to 5 more and after 2 months it suddenly becomes scientiffic fact. No one person is an expert on all corals or all fish and they should not pretend to be. This is a valuable site for getting quick information, but if Sammystingray says one thing and the guys at garf say another, I would believe garf(they are a scientiffic lab who does research and is published in many top notch magazines). Remember one can become a shark by posting 10000 lies. In brief, if you have a chance at keeping something alive, then take it, if it poses no risk to your other inhabitants. Worst case scenario, you lose 25 bucks and learn something. Best case scenario, you end up with a tank of thriving mushrooms, polyps, and leathers.