A heater would be required for proper sustainment of life.thanks mate, if I wqs to buy some plants online could I keep them in a bucket of water for 4-5 days while IM waiting to do the complete make over?
A heater would be required for proper sustainment of life.thanks mate, if I wqs to buy some plants online could I keep them in a bucket of water for 4-5 days while IM waiting to do the complete make over?
You would need a heater in the bucket now the weather is getting colder, but for a few days that should be OK.
Word of caution about plants. If you have or intend to have shrimps or snails in the tank, be careful about the source of any plants. By EU law, any plants grown outside the EU must be treated with snail killer; and some non-EU countries also treat them with insecticide. A seller in this country may well be selling plants imported from outside the EU. If you don't want shrimps or snails, they're OK to use.
(I know we have left, but EU laws in place before we left have to be repealed or they still apply)
No problem, thanks a lot for that. I don’t think I am wanting snails or shrimps as of yet I’m only having fish and corys when the sand goes down. I hope I don’t kill any fish when I’m doing all this my only worry! I’ve done a water change today so I’ll be doing my refurb next tank change next week Tuesday/Wednesday time is it advices to add some liquid bacteria after the change?
Yes mate, This is my main issue of changing everything around. That’s why I’m worried about loosing fish. List below I have a 150L Fluval tank.Do you have any fish yet, I can't remember
It's probably been said before but there will be a lot of muck in the old substrate so you'll end up having to completely empty the tank. I did when I changed to sand. I couldn't believe how messy the old gravel was
Siphon some water into a container, and put the fish, and decor and filter in the container. Once you've removed the old substrate and water, put the sand in and plant those plants rooted in the substrate then refill with new water. If you want to use a bacterial starter to help replace the bacteria in the old substrate, add it when you refill. Then put the fish, decor and filter back into the tank.
Measure the size of the inlet pipe (the bit with the open plastic grooves where the water is taken from the tank into the filter) then search for an intake sponge that will fit. They reduce the flow slightly, but do stop massive things from clogging the filter or sand being sucked up. Acts as more mechanical and biological filtration too.Sounds good mate! I’ll also add some of the old water back in. I cleaned some gravel today and done a water change and omg it was disgusting tank had some floating about all clear now.
I have a questions I have an external filter and worried about sand sucking into it? It doesn’t have a foam bit on the outlet just a bit Of grooves plastic. How can I ensure nothing damages the filter?
Measure the size of the inlet pipe (the bit with the open plastic grooves where the water is taken from the tank into the filter) then search for an intake sponge that will fit. They reduce the flow slightly, but do stop massive things from clogging the filter or sand being sucked up. Acts as more mechanical and biological filtration too.
You do need to keep an eye on how dirty and blocked it gets though, my intake sponge needs removing and cleaning more often than the rest of the filter. I put a plastic bag over my hand and cover the intake sponge before turning it off, then remove the whole lot and rinse it out. When I turned it off and then removed the sponge without the bag, a lot of the muck would fall off and float around the tank again.
About your pm, I'll upload some photos when I get some more time later, have some water changes and fish catching to do right now
Yeah, moving it up should work.Thanks mate, no rush.
Would it not work if I move the inlet pipe further up. rather tan say 1 inch of the bottom. As wouldn't it not filter the dirt out the tank correctly with a foam pad around the inlet?
Yeah, moving it up should work.
Sorry, I automatically think of sponge intake covers because I keep shrimp and have fry from my guppies, which would get sucked into the canister filter without an intake sponge (one time my sponge slipped, and I found 13 fry in the canister. most survived, but some didn't ) But if you're not going to have shrimp or teeny fish, no need to cover the intake.
Intake sponges do slow the flow a little, but they still do a good job of filtering. Anything too large gets stuck in the sponge, but the sponge also becomes covered in nitrifying bacteria, and means you need to clean the sponge to get the larger stuff as well as cleaning the filter. But it doesn't stop the bacteria from processing ammonia/nitrites, or turning over the water, which is the main thing I want from my filter. I tend to remove things like plant debris during weekly gravel/sand cleaning.
Picture of my first tank, before I ripped it apart a couple of weeks ago. 15 gallon, 59 litre, gravel substrate.
View attachment 114715View attachment 114716
And a pic of my new set up, sorry not a great pic, I need to adjust my camera, and this was only set up last Tuesday, so it looks really new. Also a 15 gallon, sand substrate. More pics and info about the planting in this thread:
View attachment 114717Re-starting 15 gallon, 1st time with sand
Planning to add MTS, but also going to be a planted tank, so stirring up the sand too much especially in the thicker areas might be a problem for the plants, possibly? I do want a fairly thick layer so I can have some height at one end, but think I might have gone a bit mad. Any thoughts before...www.fishforums.net
So the first tank is a mess now, will be rescaping it when I can get some more hardscape and plants, but plants are tricky right now since I have shrimp. Like @essjay warned, plants grown outside the EU have been sprayed or dipped in pesticides that kill shrimp. I didn't know that, bought some plants from LFS and online, lost a lot of shrimp. So this second, sanded tank was set up quickly to move my shrimp colony into a safe tank.
Also have a 12 gallon grow out tank but nothing special and don't have a pic yet, and partial custody of my elderly father's 57 gallon tank. It's his tank/fish/say, I just do water changes, add plants and filtration, and do maintenance.
View attachment 114722
This one is an overstocked, livebearer nightmare, but I caught up a load of the fish to go to the LFS tomorrow. Still a crowded tank full of fry, but less overstocked now I've removed 30 odd young adult platies and mollies.
For anyone wondering, OP asked me for pics of my current set ups. I'm not just randomly hijacking a thread
OP, what did you want to ask about plant names?
@HoldenOn thought you might find this answer from @Tobek28 useful for when you want to replace your substrate, some good infoI believe you said you already ordered some sand, but I thought I'd chime in. I haven't used it, but play sand can be a little dirty and take more rinsing to get it clean at the start. Many people in the States have used pool filter sand (I did) because it is cleaner. I got about 50 lbs for $8 USD at my local Menards (hardware/construction supply store). It might be worth checking out if it could work for you in the future.
About replacing substrate. If you haven't already, it might be as good idea to replace 50% at a time. That way you lose less of the bacteria in the substrate at once and can help repopulate it faster.