moonraker
New Member
I went mad at the weekend and bought a 500 litre + tank to replace my 240 litre (mainly) Cichlid tank. I am planning to make the changeover at the weekend, and would appreciate any advice on how to make the change smoothly, with minimum disruption to the fish.
My difficulty is that I need to locate the new tank in the position of the current one which will require some juggling.
My plan as it stands is:
1, buy a plastic bin. I can use this first to clean the new substrate, (moving from gravel to sand despite some reservations about cleaning).
2, syphon the existing water into the bin, and locate my fish there also.
3, Remove existing tank and stand, install new tank, add new substrate, put in "old" water with fish from bin. I've got to do this qiuckly because the tank is in a shed, and it's not too warm in UK at this time of year.
4, Install heaters
5, Install filter from old tank (a fluval 404), install new filter (Rena XP3 that came with the new tank).
6, Add the extra water over a few days. (This is one of my main concerns, I will have to add I guess 270 litres (60%) to fill the new tank, which is one hell of a water change).
7, I guess that the (re)cycling of the tank will then be an issue. Would it be worth putting some of the old substrate, into a old stocking, and leaving it in the tank for a few weeks? Would it help the new filter if I take some of the media from the old filter, and install it in the new filter? I plan to do daily 10% water changes on the existing tank until the changeover to make sure the "old" water is in good condition.
I will use my old rocks, but as this tank is a lot deeper, I plan to make cave/shelves with old slate, and maybe flowerpot spacers as I think I can build that quite high with stability.
8, Then my aim will be to get mates for my existing singles, and to replace my recently departed Red tail shark who did such a good job of keeping the house in order. I feel I owe it to my existing fish to sort them out satisfactorily before considering different types.
My only "problem" fish are the Brichardi who defend their territory a bit too well when they have fry. I am hoping that the bigger tank will give them the space they need. The fish being transferred are:
1 Bristlenose M 3.5"
1 S. Multi 4"
1 S. Eupterus 5"
2 PS. Demasoni M, 3.5", ?, 2" (They get on fine)
4 PS. Acei yellow tail, + fry, + 1 holding.
2 Rusties + 2-3 juveniles, + holding
1 Red Empress M 5"
1 A. Jacobfriedbergi M 4"
2 n. brichardi and their brood from hell
2 Ps soccolofi Albino 2"
1 Yellow Lab 3"
Any suggestions, traps to beware, or advice would be appreciated.
Thanks, Kevin
My difficulty is that I need to locate the new tank in the position of the current one which will require some juggling.
My plan as it stands is:
1, buy a plastic bin. I can use this first to clean the new substrate, (moving from gravel to sand despite some reservations about cleaning).
2, syphon the existing water into the bin, and locate my fish there also.
3, Remove existing tank and stand, install new tank, add new substrate, put in "old" water with fish from bin. I've got to do this qiuckly because the tank is in a shed, and it's not too warm in UK at this time of year.
4, Install heaters
5, Install filter from old tank (a fluval 404), install new filter (Rena XP3 that came with the new tank).
6, Add the extra water over a few days. (This is one of my main concerns, I will have to add I guess 270 litres (60%) to fill the new tank, which is one hell of a water change).
7, I guess that the (re)cycling of the tank will then be an issue. Would it be worth putting some of the old substrate, into a old stocking, and leaving it in the tank for a few weeks? Would it help the new filter if I take some of the media from the old filter, and install it in the new filter? I plan to do daily 10% water changes on the existing tank until the changeover to make sure the "old" water is in good condition.
I will use my old rocks, but as this tank is a lot deeper, I plan to make cave/shelves with old slate, and maybe flowerpot spacers as I think I can build that quite high with stability.
8, Then my aim will be to get mates for my existing singles, and to replace my recently departed Red tail shark who did such a good job of keeping the house in order. I feel I owe it to my existing fish to sort them out satisfactorily before considering different types.
My only "problem" fish are the Brichardi who defend their territory a bit too well when they have fry. I am hoping that the bigger tank will give them the space they need. The fish being transferred are:
1 Bristlenose M 3.5"
1 S. Multi 4"
1 S. Eupterus 5"
2 PS. Demasoni M, 3.5", ?, 2" (They get on fine)
4 PS. Acei yellow tail, + fry, + 1 holding.
2 Rusties + 2-3 juveniles, + holding
1 Red Empress M 5"
1 A. Jacobfriedbergi M 4"
2 n. brichardi and their brood from hell
2 Ps soccolofi Albino 2"
1 Yellow Lab 3"
Any suggestions, traps to beware, or advice would be appreciated.
Thanks, Kevin