Greetings all. First post here.
I recently developed the bug to set up a saltwater reef tank (I have never had an aquarium). Been doing a lot of reading and video watching. I am 100% sure that I can find all of the answers to my questions by continuing to search the forum, but it is easier of course to just include them in a post, so here we go.
Based on goals - a tank with soft coral (maybe some LPS?) and 6ish fish - and my reading, I think a 40g breeder tank makes sense to start. I like the dimensions - I would prefer a longer tank rather than a cube. Money is not really an issue (although I am not looking to waste money of course) - I was thinking about starting with an innovative marine 60 gallon EXT sump tank, but realized that is just plain silly - overly complicated to set up and maintain, a lot of water to make and move, and just too much to start. I am looking for relative simplicity (with as little plumbing and jury rigging as possible) and reliability in a first tank. And I gather than a 40g tank is enough volume to be relatively forgiving of mistakes.
For those reasons, I am thinking about setting the tank up with an HOB filter (marineland penguin Pro 375 is one that I have seen reviewed). I haven't found pre-made AIO 40g breeder sized tanks and the after market AIO add ons seem to have their own potential issues (need to silicone the back to the tank?) and also seem to really cut into the depth of the tank.
So... what do people think of that idea? Some questions are:
For a HOB filter (or perhaps two of them side by side?) - does everything go inside those filters? Heater, pumps, various types of media. Would I need to hang an ATO separately? I would like to use one of those roller filters rather than socks - can they fit inside an HOB filter or do they hang separately? I assume the basic RO/DI maker (75G a day) would be more than sufficient? Oh, and any recommendations for premade stands for a tank this size?
If people would care to make recommendations based on my goal - simplicity and reliability first, and willing to pay more for quality components - it would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks!
I recently developed the bug to set up a saltwater reef tank (I have never had an aquarium). Been doing a lot of reading and video watching. I am 100% sure that I can find all of the answers to my questions by continuing to search the forum, but it is easier of course to just include them in a post, so here we go.
Based on goals - a tank with soft coral (maybe some LPS?) and 6ish fish - and my reading, I think a 40g breeder tank makes sense to start. I like the dimensions - I would prefer a longer tank rather than a cube. Money is not really an issue (although I am not looking to waste money of course) - I was thinking about starting with an innovative marine 60 gallon EXT sump tank, but realized that is just plain silly - overly complicated to set up and maintain, a lot of water to make and move, and just too much to start. I am looking for relative simplicity (with as little plumbing and jury rigging as possible) and reliability in a first tank. And I gather than a 40g tank is enough volume to be relatively forgiving of mistakes.
For those reasons, I am thinking about setting the tank up with an HOB filter (marineland penguin Pro 375 is one that I have seen reviewed). I haven't found pre-made AIO 40g breeder sized tanks and the after market AIO add ons seem to have their own potential issues (need to silicone the back to the tank?) and also seem to really cut into the depth of the tank.
So... what do people think of that idea? Some questions are:
For a HOB filter (or perhaps two of them side by side?) - does everything go inside those filters? Heater, pumps, various types of media. Would I need to hang an ATO separately? I would like to use one of those roller filters rather than socks - can they fit inside an HOB filter or do they hang separately? I assume the basic RO/DI maker (75G a day) would be more than sufficient? Oh, and any recommendations for premade stands for a tank this size?
If people would care to make recommendations based on my goal - simplicity and reliability first, and willing to pay more for quality components - it would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks!