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i just cleaned out my freshwater tank and i want to convert it to a salt water tank a.s.a.p. i need to know step by step process so iget this right

2006-08-17 03:42:47 · 8 answers · asked by Anonymous in Pets Fish

8 answers

fill it with fresh water and get proper PH; then take a sample to the fish store and they will sell the chemicals

2006-08-20 16:32:34 · answer #1 · answered by Calvin of China, PhD 6 · 0 0

I have recently turned my ten gallon freshwater tank into a salt water quarantine tank. Here is what I would suggest you do
1. empty and throw out all substrate, plant decorations and filter media.
2. rinse the tank out well and fill with salt water mixed to a s.g. of 1.022 (you will need a hydrometer and distilled/reverse osmosis cleaned water). Replace the florescent light with new high-quality ones and buy new filter media (you need a filter that moves at least ten gallons/hour for every gallon in the tank and it must have mechanical, biological and chemical filtration). I would recommend a wave maker as well - it keeps the slime blooms to a minimum.
3. Add three or four inches of crushed aragonite/live sand as a substrate and one pound of live rock for every gallon of water (the more porous the better).
4. Test the water regularly with a marine test kit. The tank will have spikes in ammonia, nitrite and nitrate and then settle out.
5. Add your clean-up crew and a protein skimmer, keeping a watch for any more spikes in your tank.
6. Add fish - do your research first, many pet store employees only sound like they know what they are talking about.

This is for a fish only with live rock tank (FOWLR). It will work if you want to add gorgonians, fans, anemones, mushrooms and zooantids, but then you have to start adding water supplements.

2006-08-18 05:49:06 · answer #2 · answered by iceni 7 · 0 0

you make investments a large number of time and funds. You first take out each and every little thing freshwater and strip it right down to the hardware. then you want to operate; perfect lights, a sump, sand and stay rock, ability heads, protien skimmer and, for sure, MARINE salt. it truly is only the bare minimum. You enable that one and all cycle for more beneficial or less 6 weeks without lights protecting temp and salinity good, you opt for a hydrometer. then you commence procuring for issues. i propose a reef to commence, which needs a minimun of a sixty 5 gallon tank. it truly is, except you purchase a pre-set up nano reef of a few type, then you stick with the teachings featuring the kit. except you've were given metallic hallide an atinic lights, you won't be able to shop corals. talk with people at your close by marine tank aquarium shop to work out what matches your set up. when you've your creepy crawlies, crabs, anenomes, feather dusters, shrimp, etc. regularly occurring then you could flow into fish. carried out good it takes about 6 months to get set up and carried out good. properly, a lot less, yet i'm giving time for mistakes at first. And in case you spend a lot less then say $3000 on it, you've were given a really solid deal. it truly is properly worth it interior the top, yet a soreness interior the butt to commence.

2016-11-05 00:22:37 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

you should be aware of the expense of a salt water tank, ive heard it can be around $100/g to set up, and I can believe it. This is the only reason I have not attempted it yet, I just can't afford it!
I don't think you can expect to find out how to do it in a yahoo answer, Id suggest try fish keeping forums and websites ,and do alot of research before you jump into it, so you can avoid making beginner mistakes.
Its not something to rush into blindly, not if you care about your fish.

2006-08-17 04:54:27 · answer #4 · answered by sylviapumpkin 2 · 0 0

You must be joking right? What about reglating the PH, alkalinity, saline levels, temperature, filtration of nitrites, did you buy live rock yet? Sand bed for the bottom? UV, sump with skimmer, make sure you include all that in your changeover! You have the compact lighting or halide lights?

2006-08-17 03:51:10 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Pour salt into the water.

2006-08-17 03:47:23 · answer #6 · answered by jb 4 · 0 2

There are sea salts you can buy.

http://saltaquarium.about.com/od/seasaltmixes/

2006-08-17 03:50:29 · answer #7 · answered by cubsfreak2001 5 · 0 0

you tell her slyviapumkin. my aunt has a saltwater tank and the fish can also be expensive

2006-08-17 08:37:29 · answer #8 · answered by for shizl 2 · 0 0

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