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Looks great! I wouldnt be to worried.
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Morning. Morning. Morning...
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Maui Wowie
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Omm nom nom...
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I've got a plate in my head
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Almost got the shot
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Not bad for a $5 fish
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I love my green chromis very entertaining fish to watch
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They aren't very green are they?
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Found a clutch of clownfish eggs last night. Hiding in a crevice under my RBTA there was an orange glob that looked orange/peach colored. Well googled clownfish eggs and what do you know?
I will TRY to raise some but I know nothing about how to collect the babies once they're hatched, how to keep them separate from everything that would eat them etc. If all goes well I'll have a bunch of baby pink-skunk clowns! |
Added a few fish and slugs today courtesy of my frequent flyer friend!
Added: - red-headed goby - catalina goby - two lettuce nudibranchs - tiger tail cucumber |
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- One golden head jawfish - Two common cleaner wrasses - One Allardi Clownfish Got the clownfish home and he hangs with my torch coral or the Haddon's carpet. He's obviously a wild caught and has a fair amount of fin damage. He's perking up a little every day and is becoming more mobile. Why do I let myself feel sorry for fishies in the pet store? |
https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-h...ntitled-57.jpg
It's like a warm cozy blankie... https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-G...ntitled-47.jpg Aye aye sir! |
So I got tired of having to start the siphon on my eshopps overflow after tank maintenance and feeding, and thought it would be a good time to try something different. I decided on the CPR-100 overflow and Tom's aqualifter pump as I've heard great things about them. I was a little unsure if I'd like the CPR and Aqualifter combo, it just seemed like more things that could go wrong.
My specific requirements were that I wanted something that would stop the overflow when I activated a feed timer and would start again after the cycle was ended. Also it needed to restore the circulation through my sump after a power-outage. Secondary considerations were better skimming, better build quality, quieter, etc. Starting with the Tom's aqualifter pump I was expecting something kind of hollow feeling and cheap because that's honestly how it looks in the images I've seen of it. Also 90% of aquarium specific gear wind up being made with the least possible amount of materials and in the cheapest manner possible (Coralife are you listening?) The pump is surprisingly hefty and chunky feeling, which in itself doesn't mean quality but is a pretty good start. I plugged the pump in the wall and set it on my floor and it was very loud... Fortunately that's because there wasn't any water moving through it just yet and as soon as it was actually siphoning water it went nearly silent. I am very happy with this unit and I'm a little sorry I haven't had a use for one before now. One of the hangers for the back of the overflow or to hang it to my stand would keep it off the floor which would be pretty handy for cleaning up around the tank. Moving on to the CPR overflow itself I was a little startled at how much wider it is than the Eshopps model. It is easily twice as wide as the Eshopps and is made of heavier acrylic, with a much wider overflow comb. It is wider at the back and has a slightly different drain that my Eshopps 1" hose wouldn't fit quite snug enough without PVC glue. The good news is that they are very common schedule 80 fittings. The strainer inside the overflow box is a common slip fit strainer with a hole drilled through the top for a vent tube. I'd like to tell a story about how easy it was to set up and level, etc. but the whole truth is that I didn't do squat. I didn't need to. I set it on the back of my aquarium and the water level was perfect without so much as turning a single adjustment screw. Same with leveling it against the back of the tank, I had nothing to do. Once the glue had cured I plugged the Aqualifter into the nipple at the top of the overflow and poured enough water into the back to complete the seal and boom it was running. The overflow and my pump must have been very well matched because I didn't need to adjust *anything* and the water in the sump and the tank stayed exactly as it was. I was extremely pleased while slightly disappointed at not having to do anything short of lifting the appropriate hoses etc. into place. It is clearly skimming MUCH more surface water due to the increased area of the comb and it is also much quieter than my Eshopps overflow. So far it's a 10/10 and I still need to try out the feed cycle and see if it works like I am hoping. Also I should point out that the air-line the aqualifter uses should be a pretty heavy gauge, like the ozone resistant kind so that it won't kink quite as easily. The thin stuff I'm using now is pretty weak so it looks like it will easily kink up after a while. |
Check out the tents on this torch coral:
https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-w...o/IMG_3445.JPG That's a full grown cleaner wrasse in front of it. Here's a picture of the first month I had him: https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-k...h873-no/13+-+1 |
Does anyone read these?? :)
So this weekend was a good and not so good for my 90g reef tank. On Friday night I bought two golden head sleeper gobies (one for my tank one for my daughter's), two PJ Cardinals, and a small Copper-Band Butterfly. The Copper and the PJs weren't really a great buy as the copper and one of the PJ's didn't even last 24 hours. They wound up getting picked off by something during the night and they are gone without a trace. Also went to Golds and got two corals and a rock with macro algae. You would not believe the amount of red worms I got off them when I dipped them. I bought a white bubble coral as well as a peach and baby blue acropora. The acropora was clean but the bubble had at least thirty red worms come off in the dip. I left it in for extra long and blasted the rock with a syringe to make sure that the dip got into all the crevices etc. Also sprayed the coral but more gently. The rock with macro was covered in worms and slugs as well. I pulled off seven large slugs, an emerald crab (freebie woohoo!), three blue-legged hermits, three or four unknown snails, and some sort of polyp (looked like an anemone). Of course it was infested with worms too. The dip looked like a worm collector when I was finished. Right now they are in a QT and I'm going to dip them again before they go into my DT. Pictures to follow. |
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I read them :biggrin: i read lots but rarely post
Nobody seems to reply on build threads either much lol . Sound like you got alot more then you paid for lol . They should include a free bottle of dipping solution with each coral they sell lol . Hopefully you you got all the bad pests .. Good luck , sorry to hear about the fish lost . Your store have any policy on survival ? |
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Kien: You don't even read your text messages so why would you read a tank thread? :P |
Good thing you dip your corals? So you're shutting off your overflow at feeding time to prevent the food from getting sucked down or?
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Anyways, interested in a purple tip frogspawn? :D They are pretty plush. |
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We have names for chicks like you Kien...
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Ohhh Kien is such a player......
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Deltec MCE600
Well I was finally able to track one of these down at Wai's in Calgary. He had it at a great price too @$549 ($30ish less than average). I got the display model which I don't normally do but he said he'd take it back if it leaks or has any hidden damage. It doesn't appear to have any issues. I took it home and cleaned it out, took the plastic off etc. The set up for this skimmer is stupid easy, there's nothing to do. It could be because mine was a display model but all I had to do was unpack the thing, fill it up, and then plug it in. Immediately I noticed that the intake and output tubes were far too long and projected into my tank quite a ways. No problem, the manual says I can cut these back as needed; which I will do once I'm sure I don't have to return it. I hung it, adjusted the bracket, installed the degassing thing on the return pipe and plugged it in. First thing it does is overflow... Swearing and growling I clean up the salt water, re-read the instructions and make sure I am doing things as per their instruction. OK ready to go again, it overflows and quite substantially this time. More swearing and growling as I think to myself that it may not be a product for me if it's this problematic at the start. I raise the skim cup even more and plug it back in and it works! No over flowing, and a fine white foam in the pump chamber. A couple more minutes go by and then it overflows the skim cup. Man what a pain in the butt! I dump the cup and adjust the air a bit etc. and plug it back in and it stays more or less stable. By the time I had plugged my ozone line into the venturi tube things were working just fine. No over flowing and no wet skim etc. First impression is that it is pretty twitchy to start up despite it being plug and play. It is loud only due to the return line being above water level. The construction of the skimmer is exceptional, everything is made out of much heavier plastic and Lexan than other skimmers; in particular my Tunze 9016. The unit probably weighs 10 or so lbs without water in it. I like the space for a bag of filter media; which I have used for carbon. I was never able to filter the output of the Tunze skimmer through carbon to remove the O3 and I'm glad I am able to now. I'm cautiously optimistic about the skimmer. It will be my third skimmer now and I have yet to find one that I am confident in and I think does a decent job. Every review, thread, blog etc. says this is the skimmer to go with so I have my fingers crossed. Also I have JUST received my two Allardi's clowns from Kraken's Reef and I will be introducing them to my POTM winner Clark eventually. |
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