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Old 11-29-2013, 01:35 PM
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For a 50g, I'd use about 40 pounds max!
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Old 11-29-2013, 01:39 PM
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What no poll
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Old 11-29-2013, 02:22 PM
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Holy crap 120lbs for a 50g? That's insane lol. Is there even space to put ur hand in the tank?
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Old 11-29-2013, 02:35 PM
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Quote:
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For a 50g, I'd use about 40 pounds max!
Thats not very much Brad.

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Holy crap 120lbs for a 50g? That's insane lol. Is there even space to put ur hand in the tank?
I bet I could scape with that much, {which Im not} and still have lots of room. I will tell you fish like wrasses, dwarf angels, blennies and so on would love it.


So does this mean Im having a rock sale....
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Old 11-29-2013, 03:00 PM
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Thats not very much Brad.
The advantage to "lite" rock work is lots of flow to remove detritus and keep the water cleaner. And once the coral grows in, the tank gets pretty full. I would actually use 25-30 pounds in a 50g, but I gave you an extra 10 to play with 'cause I know you're old school

As a reference, I have about 100 pounds in my 180 and the fish are running out of swimming room.
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Old 11-29-2013, 03:05 PM
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If you have smaller fish then giving them a nook or cranny to hide/sleep in will definitely be appreciated, but you don't need to build mount everest to achieve this. Even one porous boulder can house lots of small fish.

For my tangs, they are ok under an overhang, although I do have an open(ish) cave area that they retreat to as well.

Also, an open aquascape doesn't necessarily mean sparse. You can have a decent a mount of rock in there with nooks and crannies and even caves, while still maintaining an open aquascape with lots of negative space.
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Old 11-29-2013, 03:09 PM
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I guess it also depends how you define sparse.

I wouldn't consider my aquascape sparse in rocks. Here's my middle structure that actually has a fair amount of rocks with lots of places in it for small-medium sized fish to hide. The structure itself is made of pretty large porous rock, while its overall footprint is light.


Last edited by kien; 11-29-2013 at 03:13 PM.
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Old 11-29-2013, 03:10 PM
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Originally Posted by kien View Post
If you have smaller fish then giving them a nook or cranny to hide/sleep in will definitely be appreciated, but you don't need to build mount everest to achieve this. Even one porous boulder can house lots of small fish.

For my tangs, they are ok under an overhang, although I do have an open(ish) cave area that they retreat to as well.

Also, an open aquascape doesn't necessarily mean sparse. You can have a decent a mount of rock in there with nooks and crannies and even caves, while still maintaining an open aquascape with lots of negative space.
Some look like a bean pole sitting in the middle of a playground though. Now thats sparse.

Ok Im going to look yours over again
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Old 11-29-2013, 03:17 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kien View Post
If you have smaller fish then giving them a nook or cranny to hide/sleep in will definitely be appreciated, but you don't need to build mount everest to achieve this. Even one porous boulder can house lots of small fish.

For my tangs, they are ok under an overhang, although I do have an open(ish) cave area that they retreat to as well.

Also, an open aquascape doesn't necessarily mean sparse. You can have a decent a mount of rock in there with nooks and crannies and even caves, while still maintaining an open aquascape with lots of negative space.
+ 1! I aquascaped my tank so that when I was done on day one, there was as much negative space as I wanted, I barely accounted for corals. Now that things are growing in I would like nothing more than to remove about 1/3 of my rock, but at this point there's too much coral too well encrusted and interwoven to do that safely. I feel like you can always add more rock later, but removing it once the system grows in is a much larger kind of surgery
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Old 11-29-2013, 03:08 PM
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Originally Posted by Aquattro View Post
The advantage to "lite" rock work is lots of flow to remove detritus and keep the water cleaner. And once the coral grows in, the tank gets pretty full. I would actually use 25-30 pounds in a 50g, but I gave you an extra 10 to play with 'cause I know you're old school

As a reference, I have about 100 pounds in my 180 and the fish are running out of swimming room.

That I am my friend...

I have 50# of Pukani, so guess its all I will use and a couple flat ones I bought to do my overflow but they skinny.

Wanna buy a tub full of Fiji.....
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