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Old 12-28-2007, 04:03 AM
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I prefer the sand bed. I like it mostly because it provides a home and food for my sleeper goby, but I also like how it looks.
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Old 12-28-2007, 04:21 AM
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well i look at all the tanks that have a sand bed like Marie's tank amazing, and others on htis board, chaulopa another one, there are so many that have great sucess with it. but on the other hand there is many with great sucess with out it, however alot of reefers are using many gaugets to take out the no3 and the phoshates. well i know that I'm going to ahve a sand bed with good quality snd for my cube when i get back from Afghanistan.
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Old 12-28-2007, 04:45 AM
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I've got a mixed reef with a little bit of everything like you and I've found a happy middle with just a 1" sandbed in the front half of the tank. It's essentially just for looks, but keeps my gobies and pistol shrimp happy. Looks much better than BB.
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Old 12-28-2007, 04:50 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by fkshiu View Post
I've got a mixed reef with a little bit of everything like you and I've found a happy middle with just a 1" sandbed in the front half of the tank. It's essentially just for looks, but keeps my gobies and pistol shrimp happy. Looks much better than BB.
how is your nitrates in your tank
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Old 12-28-2007, 05:08 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by asmodeus View Post
how is your nitrates in your tank
I haven't the faintest clue as I've never tested for NO3 in this tank. I'm assuming it's very low since my SPS are all nicely coloured up and growing.

I have a relatively low fishload for a 150 gallon system: 6" regal tang, 3" purple tang, 6-line wrasse, royal gramma, diamond goby and a couple oc. clowns. I feed once a day, skim wet and have a ball of chaeto in the sump on a reverse light cycle. I run purigen but have been too lazy yet to crack open the bucket of GFO that I just ordered. I also have some xenia in the sump which is the only unorthodox method of nutrient removal that I'm doing.
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Old 12-28-2007, 05:39 AM
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A shallow sand bed of 1-1.5 inches is all I've ever had until i went bare bottom. Never had any issues with high nitrates, in fact I think mine are worse now without a sand bed. I can't wait until I set up the new tank and go back to a sand bed.
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Old 12-28-2007, 06:54 AM
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Well I hate my sand, so put me down for BB.

I would switch it in a heartbeat if it wasn't so hard to do.

The key is bioload and balancing your waste management. High bioload + a Sandbed is a recipe for disaster in the future. Unless of course you are the worlds best water changer. A sandbed will mask your high bioload problem until it no longer can, and then you're in for some major problems.

Having no sand will not mask this problem and you'll be forced to deal with it before you have major long lasting problems.

Flow is the other area of concern, 'high' flow rates are not possible using sand as it won't stay put. Flow is the #1 overlooked important thing in this hobby, water movement makes everything possible. Stagnant tanks aren't good for much..
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