10 gallon tank.

Discussion in 'New To The Hobby' started by lfndust, Jun 25, 2006.

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  1. lfndust

    lfndust Astrea Snail

    Joined:
    Jun 24, 2006
    Messages:
    52
    Location:
    CA
    I have a 10 gallon tank laying around, I was wondering if its possible since I want to try salt water to just start a salt water tank with a ten gallon and learn about it I have a spair bio wheel 330, and I have a maxi-jet 1200, would that be crazy to try and do or not? let me know thanks boys.
     
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  3. combiemaster

    combiemaster Plankton

    Joined:
    Apr 27, 2006
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    Location:
    Los Angeles
    naw go for it just also get some live sand and you ready to go and maybe 10 to 15 pounds of live rock. do you have a light???
     
  4. G-Boy

    G-Boy Flamingo Tongue

    Joined:
    Mar 13, 2006
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    Location:
    Rensselaer, Indiana
    The way I understand it is that you really should try on a little larger scale first and as you gain experience then go with a nano tank. With such a small volume of water it is very easy for small mistakes to become large mistakes. There really is no room for error in a 10 gallon tank. Just my thought tho. :)
     
  5. ragc

    ragc Bristle Worm

    Joined:
    Mar 23, 2006
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    147
    Location:
    Atlanta, GA, USA
    My 10 gallon saltwater just turned a year old and it's doing great! Look up my recent post titled It's been a while... to see what I have in my ten (also read my signature at the bottom).

    1) For SW you don't need the bio-wheel, although, in my opinion, it doesn't hurt either. Some will say that it encourages nitrate accumulation, my nitrates read zero with a filter pad, so I don't place a lot of stock in that.
    Get ten lbs. of live rock, and get your fish store to sell you sand from their tanks (doesn't take a lot for a 10, and most will sell that amount). That way you will be ahead in your cycling. Also add marine Bio-Spira: it speeds cycling up tremendously.
    2) My light is a 65W Satellite single tube fixture. It's reasonable for the price and allows me to grow SPS coral close to the top (green acropora). It also has a moonlight.
    3) Use a glass cover. Evaporation is a big factor in a 10. Your light will cause a lot of it, and your salinity can swing if you don't control it. I took the plastic hinge off mine so there is a gap in the front and the filter cutout in the back, so convection takes care of heat buildup.
    4) I have pretty strong water flow with a 200 GPH HOB (Hang On Back) filter. My corals love it. I also have a rotating powerhead for turbulence, and a second nano HOB power filter running a Hagen surface skimmer. My main filter is a Skilter 250, and incorporates a protein skimmer, but the Skilter is a piece of trash out of the box. Mine is highly modified. If you do weekly 10 or 15% water changes you don't need a skimmer, or you can get a countercurrent Berlin that may fit a 10.
    5) Be prepared to monitor Salinity,Temp, Ph, Alk, Nitrites, Nitrates, and Calcium as a minimum. With a water volume this small they will want to wander off the mark. After one year my tank is very stable, but it was not at the start. Now I test only when I observe my tank and get the feeling something is not as it should be...coral growth, skimmer foam, etc.
    6) Enjoy. A 10 gallon SW is a challenge. It's fun to have one that works as well as those big 150 gal tanks you see pictures of all the time. For those who tell you to start big, then go small...my ten is my first SW tank, it is challenging, and I'll never go big! What would the point be?
     
    Last edited: Jun 25, 2006
  6. lfndust

    lfndust Astrea Snail

    Joined:
    Jun 24, 2006
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    Location:
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    Questions. Will I need a Heater? Two - will a aqua clear filter work cause I have a small one? and I have a powerhead 1200 rotating I think too. so is that all I need to start out?
     
  7. ragc

    ragc Bristle Worm

    Joined:
    Mar 23, 2006
    Messages:
    147
    Location:
    Atlanta, GA, USA
    Heater - yes!
    Need: Thermometer, heater, hydrometer (to measure salinity), basic SW tests, Powerhead is fine, small Aqua Clear is fine, get 10 or 15 lbs. live rock and sand. Read up on cycling the tank.