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e.g Filters, heaters, etc

2006-10-26 10:19:34 · 11 answers · asked by bob m 1 in Pets Fish

11 answers

Many different ways to go about it and it depends on what type of saltwater tank you plan on setting up (Fish only, fish only with live rock, or reef tank with corals and other invertebrates). Fish only is probably the easiest to do (and least expensive) since you could set up very similar to a fresh water tank and won't really need high-wattage lighting.

Some components are expensive (live rock, quality protein skimmers, lighting (different from lighting used in most freshwater tanks if planning to stock coral or other organisms with high intensity lighting requirements). Optional equipment includes live sand, powerheads, refugiums, filters, sumps, chillers, etc. You'll need a hydrometer or refractometer to measure salinity and require the means to pre-mix and store it for use.

There is no overall correct answer to your question since there are many ways and options to set up the saltwater tank and required equipment will vary.

2006-10-27 10:04:02 · answer #1 · answered by Kay B 4 · 0 0

The bigger the tank the better. Filtration is all about personal preference. There are canister filters, sumps, wet/dry and refugium filtration. I use a canister and like the ease of cleaning it. Lighting is very important and all depends on what you are going to keep in the tank, fish only or reef.

It takes a lot of time and some money to get a tank going. You will get a lot of different opinions and you have to decide for your self what will work for you and your setup.

Here is a website that I used for research when I set up my tank a couple of years ago. Take a look at it. www.reefcentral.com

2006-10-26 12:13:09 · answer #2 · answered by tinar92 3 · 0 0

A small tank for 2 clownfish is a 25 gallon or better. The 24-29 gallon nano cubes are super for a small species of clownfish, like the percula or ocellaris (those in Nemo). The nano cubes have the filtration and lighting fixtures fixtures, you purely want the heater and extras, like salt, hydrometer, try equipment, thermometer, rock and sand. The cubes are a pair hundred for the greater low-value ones, yet they're super for beginners, and particularly finished easy structures. particular, saltwater could be a project and is not any longer for the lazy or busy people who can't stay to tell the story suitable of their tank maintenance. stay rock made protecting saltwater aquariums lots greater handy. you do no longer want corals, in fact avert them first of all, yet truthfully get stay rock. In a 24 gallon tank, get a minimum of 20 lbs of stay rock, and greater ideally 24-36 lbs. you pick for to get all your rock to start, and not attempt to function a team later, as rock could have some die off in delivery and probably reason an ammonia spike whilst extra later. The small ammonia spike is super on the beginning up without fish to start the cycling, it extremely is additionally lots shorter with stay rock. assume the rock to set you back 0-00. an astonishing place to start is with a decrease priced and common e book which will hide the fundamentals. i like the hot Marine Aquarium considering that's a small, common examine, yet is packed finished of consumer-friendly tips. you could usually get it on Amazon for decrease priced. it could have an equipment checklist.

2016-11-25 22:13:01 · answer #3 · answered by rudicil 4 · 0 0

1. A good tank
2. Water preferably Revered Osmosis
3 Salt only buy from a reputable supply
4. Fillter
5 Air Bubbles
6 Palnts
7 Leave for 10 to 14 days
8 then choose fish these are not cheap

You then need to monitor the water very carefully
Do not forget to feed them at least twice a day
Also Light on for 8 hours and off for 16
Heat at approx 24 degrees

2006-10-30 07:54:25 · answer #4 · answered by FlyingPm 2 · 0 0

The most important thing you need is time and money! We had a saltwater tank for many years and it takes several hours a week to keep clean and healthy. Although, if you have the time it is a wonderful thing to have and enjoy.

2006-10-26 10:39:35 · answer #5 · answered by dalbones2 2 · 0 0

Tank.Hood. Proper lighting. Substrate. Salt, or premixed salt water. Hydrometer. Thermometer. Heater. PH test kit. Amonia test kit. GOOD filter. Protein skimmer. Chlorine remover(like stress coat)
Thats a start. Most depends on what you are wanting to keep, and THEIR requirements. :-)

2006-10-26 10:41:09 · answer #6 · answered by PennyPickles17 4 · 0 0

A b i g a s s tank and a tankful of Saltwater, maybe a few fish or other marine animals, and perhaps some multi coloured pebble dash. lol

2006-10-30 09:21:14 · answer #7 · answered by cjbunty 2 · 0 0

Saltwater and a tank.
Oh! and one of those little castle things.
Oh! and a bit of seaweed.
Oh! and some gravel or marbles.
Oh! and a bubble blower thingy.

2006-10-28 09:24:41 · answer #8 · answered by Val G 5 · 0 0

well the best answer to that question would be to go to your local pet store or go online to petsmart.com or petco.com and ask them. I hope this helps

2006-10-26 10:25:51 · answer #9 · answered by edailey 1 · 0 0

saltwater

2006-10-26 10:28:42 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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