New Fluval 240 Aquarium

SHERRIFFP

Fish Fanatic
Joined
Apr 12, 2021
Messages
107
Reaction score
19
Location
BARNSLEY
Morning I'm picking a Fluval 240 Aquarium up today in black From a local aquarium shop.
What the first thing I need not has an Aquarium for about 12 yeard I've been looking on YouTube and reading the forum first thing I need is the following -

Substrate
Sand I'm after a white sand
And black backing sheet
And what ornaments im putting in wood any you recommend and rocks etc
Plants I dont know whether to get them today im lost with plants

Any advice will be greatly appreciated thanks
 
Hello and welcome to the forum, first steps for me would be to decide how I’m cycling the tank
Iv always opted for a fish in cycle and bottled bacteria, risky but fast
 
Great tank. I have just set up my own Fluval 240. It’s been running for about a month now.

Things you need to buy:

Substrate (white sand doesn’t stay white for very long - you will regret it)
Decor - driftwood, rocks, caves. Really anything you fancy. I like to keep the decor as natural as possible.
Plants - live plants are always best, but it’s worth doing your research on them as there is plenty of choice
Water test kit - I recommended the API freshwater test kit
Thermometer
Water conditioner - I use seachem prime

I find it much easier adding the substrate, decor and plants before adding water.
 
I have gravel in one of my tanks and sand in the other.

The main differences that I’ve noticed are that sand is easier to clean as all the mess just lies on top of the sand. With gravel it sinks between the gaps. The other difference is that plants seem to do better in gravel. But that’s just my experience.
 
Does it make a difference gravel or sand
It depends on the fish you want. If you plan any bottom dwellers (cories, loaches, plecs) you need sand. And the sand must be smooth not sharp.

Another reason for not going with white sand is it stresses fish. It reflects light back up into the tank which is not normal to fish; and virtually all fish have evolved over a darker substrate so that's what they 'expect'. Fish are dark when we look down on them so they blend in with what's underneath them making them harder to spot by predators like birds.

The cheapest sand is Argos play sand. Just that one play sand, as it's known to be fish safe. There may be other fish safe brands but they've not been tried and tested by members so we can't be certain.
 
I have gravel in one of my tanks and sand in the other.

The main differences that I’ve noticed are that sand is easier to clean as all the mess just lies on top of the sand. With gravel it sinks between the gaps. The other difference is that plants seem to do better in gravel. But that’s just my experience.

It depends on the fish you want. If you plan any bottom dwellers (cories, loaches, plecs) you need sand. And the sand must be smooth not sharp.

Another reason for not going with white sand is it stresses fish. It reflects light back up into the tank which is not normal to fish; and virtually all fish have evolved over a darker substrate so that's what they 'expect'. Fish are dark when we look down on them so they blend in with what's underneath them making them harder to spot by predators like birds.

The cheapest sand is Argos play sand. Just that one play sand, as it's known to be fish safe. There may be other fish safe brands but they've not been tried and tested by members so we can't be certain.
I picked the fluval 240 up and got on place in my dining room.. I've got two bags of activesubstrate and two bag of hugo kamishi decorate substrate and a shiny black.
 
I picked the fluval 240 up and got on place in my dining room.. I've got two bags of activesubstrate and two bag of hugo kamishi decorate substrate and a shiny black.
 

Attachments

  • IMG_20210422_194059.jpg
    IMG_20210422_194059.jpg
    195.6 KB · Views: 42
  • IMG_20210422_194046.jpg
    IMG_20210422_194046.jpg
    167 KB · Views: 45
Thanks, never heard of that one before...
 

Most reactions

Back
Top