It just seems like yesterday that all I saw everywhere was 75-150 gallon aquariums - they were even at Petco and Petsmart - now that I'm looking for one about 100 gallons and the existence of a stand (with doors - no silly canopy) I can't find any. I think I've searched every fish website on the Internet along with Petco, Petsmart and Walmart. I have found two and besides being over $1,500 just for the aquariums they had overflows and sumps etc - they were already semi-plumbed to be a salt water tank. I just want a regular aquarium - glass or acrylic made for freshwater fish. I know there are LOTS of freshwater fish people with 100 gallon tanks and stands. I'd rather not pay over $1,500 for the tank AND stand.
I also happen to be in the market for a saltwater tank as well - but I want a 40 gallon breeder tank because that is what I've read as a good beginner tank for a new reefer. I cannot find a 40 gallon breeder (at all) much less one that has the right size cabinet AND has an overflow and holes drilled- I realize you don't HAVE to go all out like that with a small saltwater tank, but I really do want to set up a sump, a protein skimmer, various pumps, UV and Live Rock and start buying corals and saltwater fish - there are really just two or three fish I'm especially interested in - I'm mainly interested in the corals. I do realize that this is a VERY expensive hobby but I have the cash to purchase the basic tank and gear and liverock - then I would just pay for the corals and fish as I went along. No hurry to have it completed quickly.
I need the 100 gallon tank and stand ASAP for my 6 DoJos that are all close to 1 foot long and still growing, even though the literature suggested that in captivity they won't outgrow the tank they are in. In the wild they get to be two feet long. They are currently in a tank with some amazingly tolerant Rainbow fish and the DoJo's eat most of the food to the point of making themselves sick. They love peas and green beans and will eat half a can of shelled peas and still be able to eat most of the flakes and pellets that I use to feed the Rainbows. It's time they have a large tank to themselves. I wouldn't be opposed to a 125 gallon which seem to be slightly easier to find but I can never find a stand to go with them or when I do it's a combination of stand and canopy which looks a little too 1980's for my taste. So where do you have the most luck finding big tanks and stands to match their size and be able to carry the weight?
Finally how you you operate a RO/DI system that puts out 50 to 100 gallons a day? I am renting so I can't really add it to the plumbing of the house but need a portable one that I could connect to the kitchen faucet when needed. They always show these systems in pictures without any additional plumbing or hoses - so how does the water get from the faucet to the RO?DI assembly and when it exits how does it get to a storage container - hoses? PVC pipes? I'm thinking about purchasing a rubbermaid trash can on wheels so I can move it too and from the aquarium room and skip the bucket brigade. Rubbermaid, I have read, doesn't leech any nasty chemicals into the water - other brands may or may not. Does anybody know what PH RO/DI systems produce or is it dependent on the PH of the water you put in (our tap water has a 9.4 PH, most saltwater organisms require an 8-8.5, while most fresh water systems should be around 7 (at least somewhere between 6.8 and 7.2 except for cichlids which like it around 8.0. I would actually need two wheeled trashcans - one for fresh water and one for salt water. The price jkeeps adding up LOL.
So your thoughts on where to get the right size of aquariums for these two "little projects"?
I also happen to be in the market for a saltwater tank as well - but I want a 40 gallon breeder tank because that is what I've read as a good beginner tank for a new reefer. I cannot find a 40 gallon breeder (at all) much less one that has the right size cabinet AND has an overflow and holes drilled- I realize you don't HAVE to go all out like that with a small saltwater tank, but I really do want to set up a sump, a protein skimmer, various pumps, UV and Live Rock and start buying corals and saltwater fish - there are really just two or three fish I'm especially interested in - I'm mainly interested in the corals. I do realize that this is a VERY expensive hobby but I have the cash to purchase the basic tank and gear and liverock - then I would just pay for the corals and fish as I went along. No hurry to have it completed quickly.
I need the 100 gallon tank and stand ASAP for my 6 DoJos that are all close to 1 foot long and still growing, even though the literature suggested that in captivity they won't outgrow the tank they are in. In the wild they get to be two feet long. They are currently in a tank with some amazingly tolerant Rainbow fish and the DoJo's eat most of the food to the point of making themselves sick. They love peas and green beans and will eat half a can of shelled peas and still be able to eat most of the flakes and pellets that I use to feed the Rainbows. It's time they have a large tank to themselves. I wouldn't be opposed to a 125 gallon which seem to be slightly easier to find but I can never find a stand to go with them or when I do it's a combination of stand and canopy which looks a little too 1980's for my taste. So where do you have the most luck finding big tanks and stands to match their size and be able to carry the weight?
Finally how you you operate a RO/DI system that puts out 50 to 100 gallons a day? I am renting so I can't really add it to the plumbing of the house but need a portable one that I could connect to the kitchen faucet when needed. They always show these systems in pictures without any additional plumbing or hoses - so how does the water get from the faucet to the RO?DI assembly and when it exits how does it get to a storage container - hoses? PVC pipes? I'm thinking about purchasing a rubbermaid trash can on wheels so I can move it too and from the aquarium room and skip the bucket brigade. Rubbermaid, I have read, doesn't leech any nasty chemicals into the water - other brands may or may not. Does anybody know what PH RO/DI systems produce or is it dependent on the PH of the water you put in (our tap water has a 9.4 PH, most saltwater organisms require an 8-8.5, while most fresh water systems should be around 7 (at least somewhere between 6.8 and 7.2 except for cichlids which like it around 8.0. I would actually need two wheeled trashcans - one for fresh water and one for salt water. The price jkeeps adding up LOL.
So your thoughts on where to get the right size of aquariums for these two "little projects"?