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#1 |
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Registered Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: portland,oregon
Posts: 806
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Lots of growout tank questions
Hello all. I'm thinking to start a small frag growout tank so I could grow out small frags for my display, give frags away to friends/family and maybe sell a few here and there to local reefers.
Anyway, I have the very basic knowledge of where to start and have lots of questions. Chime in where you can. 1) More light is better and makes coral grow faster right? What "K" makes them grow fastest and if I use only that and no actinics will I have to put them under actinics for a while after grown out to color them up? 2) Just for an idea, how fast would say a 1" plug of zoanthids double in size.....let's compare a typical not very fancy one to a rare expensive one as far as growth rates. 3) As for the amount of light. I plan to use this tank for softies, lps and sps growout. Not sure on the exact size tank I will go with but lets say 10-30 gallons. Would 1-2-3-4 t-5 bulbs be enough light? I would like to get away with less if possible and still maintain good growth rate but if I need the max then so be it. 4) As far as flow. Do I just use the same amount of flow that they would thrive in, in a display tank? I assume yes. 5) Should I feed the frag tank? Maybe just phyto? 6) Anything else that comes to mind please share. Thanks for reading this whole post and putting up with a newbie's ignorance. |
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#2 |
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Registered Member
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Prince George, BC, Canada
Posts: 468
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1. 10K bulbs generally offer the most PAR and are better for growth. However your flow and water chemistry are all very important as well. Actinics in my opinion are not necessary.
2. My zoa frags seem to double in size after about 2 months. First it takes them a couple weeks to attach. 3. I like to light my frag tank the same way I light my display, that way everything is under the same conditions so I dont have to worry about acclimating when I move coral back and forth. 4. Again, I match the conditions of my display tank with my frag tank because if it works in one its bound to work in the other. 5. I have a yellow coris wrasse in my frag tank for pest control so the tank gets fed for that reason. But I guess even if it wasnt for the wrasse I would still feed the tank. 6. Are you planning on plumbing your frag tank to you main tank or running it as a separate system?
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I have a lionfish tattoo on my back. Current Tank Info: Mixed predatory reef and soft coral nano. 300gal total. |
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#3 |
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Registered Member
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: CEN CALI
Posts: 83
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i'm for keeping it in its own system that way in the even your system does crash you do have something to start with...
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#4 | |
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Registered Member
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Prince George, BC, Canada
Posts: 468
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Quote:
Pro: Larger overall system volume will help to make both tanks more stable (especially important if you opt for a very small frag tank). Water parameters in both tanks will be identical (no need to acclimate when transporting coral back and forth). Less equipment needed (one skimmer, one heater etc). Con: What affects one tank will affect the other. (like egos4life says) Both tanks will need to be located relatively close to each other to be plumbed together. Both systems will require individual maintenance (water changes, testing, dosing etc) My display tank and frag tank are part of the same system however I am hopeful that if I ever have a complete system crash I'll be able to buy back frags of my coral that I have sold locally.
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I have a lionfish tattoo on my back. Current Tank Info: Mixed predatory reef and soft coral nano. 300gal total. |
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#5 |
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Registered Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: portland,oregon
Posts: 806
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Thank you all for your responses. I'm just trying to get an idea of exactly how I want to do this. Of course like so many people in the hobby say I wanna start small to see how it goes and develop my knack for it but of course I'll probably go larger sooner than later. I'll probably start with softies to get a feel for how things go then go straight to sps. And to answer the question it would be independant of the display.
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#6 |
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Registered Member
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 133
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I heard that 6.7k were good, if i were you i would get a 4 bulb or more.. and split between 6.7k and 10k for best growth...
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#7 |
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Registered Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: portland,oregon
Posts: 806
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Hmmmm....6.7k huh? Anyone else know anything about this? after all that is supposed to be natural sunlight K.
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#8 |
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Registered Member
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 133
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As sunlight comes into contact with the earth's atmosphere and is reflected and refracted by water and dust particles the color temperature actually changes throughout the day ranging anywhere from 5,000 to 6,000 kelvin depending on the time of day and the amount of clouds in the sky
6.7k and 10k and 15k and 20k are all degrees kelvin... the closest you can get to 5000-6000 the better grown, the higher you get the better colors |
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#9 |
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Registered Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: portland,oregon
Posts: 806
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AHHHH, thanks for that info. All this said though would growing out under say 6500k ruin the colors so to speak? I would assume I'd almost have to have a seperate growout and color up tanks because growing out under 6500 would wash out so much of the color. Would even the brightest colored frags out there grow well under 6500 or would they suffer at all? Also, would they end up getting the same colors back or would they end up with different pigments? Sorry for such long winded posts and so many questions I just want to make sure to do this right the first time and not waste a bunch of money in the process.
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#10 |
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Registered Member
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Prince George, BC, Canada
Posts: 468
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Marchingbandjs already answered your question. Just include a 6.5K bulb with a few others that are in the bluer spectrum. Then you can have both high PAR and good color. Problem solved.
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I have a lionfish tattoo on my back. Current Tank Info: Mixed predatory reef and soft coral nano. 300gal total. |
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#11 |
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Registered Member
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: windsor,ontario Canada
Posts: 482
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If I were to redo my frag tanks I would go straight to a 40G breeder with 6-t5
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90G coral prop,8-t5 h.o,25G sump,20G coral prop,4-t5 h.o,25g coral prop,4-t5 h.o,phosban reactor with no sponges loaded with biomax ceramic cyclinders as pod pile on all tanks, phytoplankton station/dosing on all tanks |
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#12 |
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Registered Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 1,711
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+1 for T5's on a frag tank.
Higher K metal halide bulbs usually offer lower par, but bluer light. Where as blue T5's offer as much if not more PAR than 10K or daylight color bulbs. It wouldnt have to be an expensive fixture, do a retro fit kit. I can only afford to do a little at a time, and this works out well for me. I buy one ballast, two reflectors, two pair of end caps and two bulbs at a time. That lets me light a 4 ft by 10" area in one tank...which is a lot of area when you are just starting out. As more money flows into the reef fund, ill get another ballast, more reflectors...and light another 10" section of tank until the whole thing is lit. |
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#13 |
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Registered Member
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: windsor,ontario Canada
Posts: 482
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When I first started I started with 4 normal output on a 50G and it was my favorite tank since then over the last seven years I get a funny feeling that the 8 t5 h.o is just not at all better then 6 t5 h.o over a 90G when people say you can never have too much flow or light imo it's not true its a hard lesson but imo people can provide coral's with more then enough light/flow but what they are missing is nutrition and feeding imo and a over sized skimmer is by far not the answer imo there is other non traditional ways
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90G coral prop,8-t5 h.o,25G sump,20G coral prop,4-t5 h.o,25g coral prop,4-t5 h.o,phosban reactor with no sponges loaded with biomax ceramic cyclinders as pod pile on all tanks, phytoplankton station/dosing on all tanks |
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#14 |
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Registered Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: portland,oregon
Posts: 806
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Ider I like what you said about started slow and building up...I never thought to do it that way...but since I wont have a full tank full of coral why not start small. Thanks.
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#15 |
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Registered Member
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: windsor,ontario Canada
Posts: 482
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start small but leave room for advancement. 6 t5 h.o leaves you with alot of option's in any tank all you have to do is switch height of coral's and kelvin
__________________
90G coral prop,8-t5 h.o,25G sump,20G coral prop,4-t5 h.o,25g coral prop,4-t5 h.o,phosban reactor with no sponges loaded with biomax ceramic cyclinders as pod pile on all tanks, phytoplankton station/dosing on all tanks |
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#16 |
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Registered Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: portland,oregon
Posts: 806
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Right...I just meant with fewer bulbs as a retro.
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#17 |
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Registered Member
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: windsor,ontario Canada
Posts: 482
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20G long with 4-t5 36" h.o 50/50 light's is surprisingly bright to start with you can get everything in there from lower light sps,zoo's,rics,lps etc
__________________
90G coral prop,8-t5 h.o,25G sump,20G coral prop,4-t5 h.o,25g coral prop,4-t5 h.o,phosban reactor with no sponges loaded with biomax ceramic cyclinders as pod pile on all tanks, phytoplankton station/dosing on all tanks |
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#18 |
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Registered Member
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 133
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i know quite a few people/companies that have 2 tanks... they have 6 bulb t-5... on is all 6.7k and 10k, and the other is all 20k... they dont hurt the color they just dont make it pop as much....
so once the corals base and have their growth spurt, they are colored up for a month then sold |
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#19 | ||
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Registered Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 1,711
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Quote:
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#20 |
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Registered Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: portland,oregon
Posts: 806
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As for having the two tanks I was kinda thinking this may be the way to do it. 1DeR9, what source are you getting this par info about with the blue bulbs? I've always understood that the blue bulbs just aren't as much par. If I see official word on it I would be satisfied but I'm wary to believe this yet. Thanks guys for all the info.
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#21 | |
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Registered Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 1,711
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Quote:
This is his site where he has tested, tested, and re-tested many bulbs and posted there results. http://sites.google.com/site/tfivetesting/par If you scroll down to the ATI bulbs, look at the Blue plus (311 measured PAR). Then scroll down to the Geismann Midday (324, looks like 6700K). That is very little difference between the blue bulbs and the white/yellow bulbs! Spectrum only matters with metal halide bulbs, i dont now why...but that's how it works. |
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#22 |
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Registered Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 1,711
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Also forgot to mention that after months of asking, observing, and reading...there seems to be very little difference in systems that keep softies separate from stonys. For awhile that was a concern in the early days of this hobby, but with how well skimmers work now and media reactors...its not an issue. Husbandry is key...as always!
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#23 |
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Registered Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: portland,oregon
Posts: 806
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Hey thanks a lot for all the info! This is stuff I probably never would have considered without people like you. To be honest I understood go 10K all the way but apparently there are so many more options. Thanks again.
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#24 | |
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Registered Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 1,711
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Quote:
For me it was easy, i could light (and i mean LIGHT!!!) a 4 ft long by 2 ft wide tank with roughly 250 watts of T5. That simply would not work with a 250 watt MH. Im even considering going down to 5 39 watt bulbs, but staggeing them so they cover 4 ft total. That would only be 200'sh watts covering a 4 ft tank... |
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