Starting a 37 column tank with no live rock...

cmholl

New Member
Hello, I recently started a SW tank and I wasn't planning on putting any live rock in it. I started it with 20lbs of dry sand and 10lbs of live store bought sand. Along with the sand I bought this really big piece of dead coral that I have in the center of the tank. Well my question is, will this dead coral become live and if so, will it be enough in the tank for the fish or will I need to add rock structures throughout the tank?
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mr. limpid

Active Member
I hope you mean live with bacteria not become a living coral. Dead corals do have some holes in them but nothing like rocks, so it will support some bacteria but not enough to filter the tank. Do you have room for a sump? Or you need a canister filter.
 

cmholl

New Member
Yes. I meant live with bacteria.... And I have a bio wheel filter right now and I just ordered a protein skimmer.
 

mr. limpid

Active Member
Personaly not a lover of the HOB filters not enough room for filrter media. Is this tank going to be a reef or fish only?
 

mr. limpid

Active Member
Forgot to ask this a standard tank not reef (Pre-drilled hole)? If standard you'll want a good ammonia remover type of filter, like a canister filter.
 

cmholl

New Member
Yeah. It's just a plain tank.. I was looking at this ammonia remover floss. Will that be good? I do plan on upgrading later on. Just want to see if I can do this whole saltwater tank thing before really dropping money.
 

mr. limpid

Active Member
The floss doesn't work that good, your better off placing zeolite in the HOB this will absorb ammonia and you can recharge it with salt.
 

cmholl

New Member
Why do you mean by recharge it with salt. And would puttin this in my hob mess with the tank cycle. I've only had it up for 2 weeks.
 

mr. limpid

Active Member
Recharge means cleaning the material so you can reuse it. And yes it will slow the cycle, you want the ammonia to be consumed by bacteria. The bacteria uses the ammonia as food source and multiplies. Basically when cycling your tank for the first time you want the ammonia to increase to 1 on your test kit scale, then remove the source of ammonia (raw shrimp). Test daily till you get a 0 reading then ghost feed tank like there is 1 fish in there, while this is going on test nitrates and nitrites, when they hit 0 you are good to add 1 fish.
 

cmholl

New Member
Thank you ill have to look into that this weekend. Another question... What do you think would look better. A painted black or blue back of the tank?
 

novahobbies

Well-Known Member
I agree with Limpid....I've had both. I prefer blue, but that's my personal taste only. Go with what looks the most neutral compared to the rest of the room's background.
 

beaslbob

Well-Known Member
I would add some macro algae to make it look like a planted tank.
If will also balance out and stabilize operations. So that ammonia and eventually nitrates and phosphates are unmeasureable.
But that just my .02
 
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