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Old 09-11-2016, 04:13 PM
incept incept is offline
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Default Moving a tank... Twice..

Soooo, I sold my house the other day, I have some land I'm building on. The kicker is that I need to build a house before I can live there. I ended up getting a mobile home I moved out there to live in while I build. My kicker now is what to do with the tank. I do not want to get rid of it or take it down as it has started to come into itself. The tank has been up for about three years now. Its a 90 gallon with a 30 gallon sump. I need to figure out the best way to move it to the mobile and set it up and then to the house once construction is completed. I'm looking for some insight and tips/tricks on this. If anyone would like to share some insight I would greatly appriciate it. Thanks in advance.. Possesion date is October 28...
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Old 09-11-2016, 04:39 PM
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Myka Myka is offline
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Remove the sandbed and discard it -preferably a week or two on advance and don't add a new sand bed until the tank is in the final position.

Is it possible you could get another 90-gallon tank? The easiest way would be to set up a tank in the trailer for a couple weeks first, then transfer everything, then move it all back to the original tank after the new build is done. Also, I'm not sure if a trailer is structurally sound enough for a 90-gallon tank. I don't think trailers have the same building code requirements as houses, but I'm not sure.
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Old 09-11-2016, 05:07 PM
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Discard the sand? Really, why is that? Don't you want live sand?
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Old 09-11-2016, 05:30 PM
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I think it's because the move would stir up the gunk and debris and cause nothing but problems once you ad water.

I'm also concerned with a 90g in a Mobile home.
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Old 09-11-2016, 05:30 PM
incept incept is offline
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Good idea on finding a different tank and setting up before hand. I'm not sure if this is a viable option though as I would need a whole extra setup. Unless I'm missing something here. The plan if all thing go accordingly is to actually replace the 90 with a 260 once the new house is done.. Then I would only need to move it technically once. See what happens though. You are correct on the trailer floor. I have already prepped and braced it where required. As for the sand bed, I to am curious as to the reasoning behind that. Is it because of potential nitrate release into the water or something different? Please help me learn here, I'm definetely a rookie here!!
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Old 09-11-2016, 09:16 PM
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Lots of detritus in a typical sandbed so you can have issues with noxious areas becoming waterborne. Also, when you move it the top layers mix with the bottom layers, and aerobic areas suddenly become anaerobic and anaerobic suddenly becomes aerobic causing lots of nitrifying and denitrifying bacteria to die-off. You'll usually get an ammonia spike when you move a sandbed (not nitrate). Sometimes you can remove the sandbed and clean it really, really well, dry it out, and then put it back in, but definitely don't move it "live". Ammonia is the killer in a tank move.

I also recommend that anytime you do a tank move you have some Prime or AmQuel on hand as well as a SeaChem Ammonia Alert badge ($10). Put the badge in the tank and it gives you live ammonia readings. The readings themselves aren't too accurate in my experience, but I've had 100% success using these badges simply to alert me when there is ammonia present. If there's color on the badges besides yellow, add a dose of AmQuel (or Prime), wait 4 hours, add again if needed.
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Old 09-12-2016, 02:50 AM
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so when I vac clean my sand bed in my display, I risk the same ammonia spike? I usually give it a pretty good stir.

I also have a tank move in my future, while the flooring gets redone.
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