StevieT
Jun 1 2010, 08:57 AM

It is small enough. Just run tons of filter floss after the move.
Clavius85
Jul 7 2010, 05:03 PM
Great guide Stevie, very helpful. But I was wondering, did you throw out your sand and start with new because you were moving your tank so far? I ask because I'll be moving my Solana 15 minutes across town soon and I'm torn on whether or not I should throw out the sand that is in it.
StevieT
Jul 7 2010, 05:08 PM
I just didn't want to risk the new set up with dirty sand. Part of me thought that all that detritus disruption wouldn't be good. I think most start new, but a lot still use the old sand. If you do decide to keep give it a good rinse in saltwater and try and save all the good critters you can find.
Msigler
Sep 20 2010, 06:00 PM
I have read over this thread about thirty times over the last couple of days. I am still nervous as hell.
I went and mixed up the water yesterday and I'm moving tonight. Actually I am in the middle of moving right now. I already made a couple of mistakes. First mistake, I mixed up the water and turned the heater all the way up and left. Second mistake, I purchased 40 gallons of distiller water an two large rrashcans but only took 1 heater and pump with me. So I'm gonna have to make more when I get there. I purchased two bags of live sand and do you think I can get away with not rinsing it? This is sooo stressful.
StevieT
Sep 21 2010, 03:50 PM
How did the move go?
Turing the heater up all the way will not heat the water faster, only over heat it after you reach than pass your desired limit. They are on/off devices.
I do not think I rinsed the new sand when I did the move, if I remember I just dumped out all the nasty water and threw it in the tank.
I am moving my tank, again this coming weekend
Spilo26
Sep 21 2010, 04:36 PM
After all that hard work your moving it again lmao.
StevieT
Sep 21 2010, 04:39 PM
No kidding right. When I moved it to my current office I did not have anywhere else to put it. I purchased a house last October and it is time to finally bring it home. I see the tank for about a minute a day and don't have the time to care for it properly let alone actually look at it!
It will give me a great opportunity to
kill this
StevieT
Sep 26 2010, 11:22 PM
DHaut
Sep 27 2010, 09:05 PM
in front of the window?
StevieT
Sep 27 2010, 09:07 PM
Only spot, window is totally un-used faces the driveway doesn't receive direct sunlight.
QUOTE (StevieT @ Sep 26 2010, 08:34 PM)

It looks pretty slick where it is, set back in this little nook of the living room. The window was never used much anyway and doesn't get direct sunlight. Now I have to play around with the lighting schedule so I can enjoy it after work a little, don't know how much day light will effect everything we have a HUGE bay window in that room. This was much easier to figure this out in the office.
Jacobnano
Sep 27 2010, 09:10 PM
Ha! I knew I wasn't the only one thinking that at first lol. Stevie has good reasoning though.
StevieT
Sep 27 2010, 11:01 PM
It is odd so the question is valid. I would love it in my home office but no room and will be viewed more in the living room.
Rocket
Oct 20 2010, 02:31 AM
I lived in Milwaukee for a few years. It gets cold. And that was next to the Lake.
I would be more concerned of heat loss with it next to the window. The
Department of Energy says this is an area of heat loss within a home.
StevieT
Oct 20 2010, 12:23 PM
I lived in IL for three years, it is flat
I have good windows but I am hoping that it cools the tank a bit in the winter. This way I can run a lower temp and have the heater do the rest.
SeanK
Dec 6 2010, 05:02 PM
im going to switch tanks and i read this thread for help
the only thing that is bothering me is if my tank goes through a cycle and kills all of my fish and coral
StevieT
Dec 7 2010, 10:36 AM
Make sure you rock is not out of water and it won't be a problem. Do biweekly water changes the first few weeks, if there is a small cycle it is easy to soft cycle it by doing those water changes.
pprice01
Dec 23 2010, 12:56 AM
Hi everyone,
This was a good read, as I am about to embark on moving my JB28 within the next month. I'm thinking of starting from scratch, but maybe I'll just refresh the sand instead. I'm curious about the pros and cons of keeping vs. replacing the sand, any thoughts?
How could I cycle new sand before the move, put it in a bucket of salt water with a pump or something?
Thanks everyone.
xtlosx
Mar 9 2011, 12:26 PM
Very nice job... Impressive planning, and even more impressive is the execution! Good work, and will use this as a guide should I ever have to move my tank.
kayl
Mar 9 2011, 01:18 PM
eek-
My move is coming up this Saturday!
Thanks for the guide StevieT!
StevieT
Mar 9 2011, 05:28 PM
QUOTE (kayl @ Mar 9 2011, 12:18 PM)

eek-
My move is coming up this Saturday!
Thanks for the guide StevieT!

good luck! It is stressful I won't lie about that but you get a fresh start and the reward is at the end.
Don't call me for help either but do enjoy a beer afterward
reeferRudy
Mar 29 2011, 12:52 PM
Thanks for the write-up Steve.
Question for ya'll. My move is comming up next month, it will be 45 mins across town.
My plan is as follows: My scape is puttied together into 2 layers, top, and bottom. I would drain some tank water into a few 5 gallon buckets (half full) and place my top chunk, and island chunk into these (with airbubble packing maybe to prevent shifting). Then completly drain the rear chambers, and drain the display down to maybe 20% full, just enough to cover the bottom level, sand level rocks.
For my BC29, can we comment on the structural integrity of the tank in relation to moving it with the sandbed, and 25% water in it? With help I believe It would be light enough to lift, but how stong is that bottom glass panel?
Relocate, and have 10 gallons fresh premixed waiting, place islands back (I am hoping for minimal sand disturbance) and fill into a bowl to prevent disturbance.
Thanks for any advice!
fewskillz
Mar 29 2011, 12:54 PM
I don't like moving tanks with anymore water in them than needs to keep the sand wet. It's even better if you're ditching all of the sand then you can get the tank as empty as possible.
doppelganger
Mar 29 2011, 01:07 PM
QUOTE (reeferRudy @ Mar 29 2011, 01:52 PM)

For my BC29, can we comment on the structural integrity of the tank in relation to moving it with the sandbed, and 25% water in it? With help I believe It would be light enough to lift, but how stong is that bottom glass panel?
Just a thought on this... I don't have a BC but I moved my standard 10 gallon (albeit like 5 min away) not too long ago. It had less than 1/2 of the water in it and it was HEAVY. I'm by no means huge but I'm not small either. 6'1 210 lbs... but it was quite a struggle for me carrying it more than a few feet. Just be VERY careful with it as it's surprisingly much much heavier than it looks. Lots of help is always good as it's awkward to hold as well. If possible I'd suggest something like a dolly to wheel it or something flat and strong. I actually used a laundry basket with handles. It held up surprisingly but it was always on the ground being dragged when it could just incase.
With that being said, take as much water out as you can as I wouldn't tempt fate with the weight of the sand bed plus water. It can be done just be very careful.
reeferRudy
Mar 29 2011, 02:02 PM
QUOTE (fewskillz @ Mar 29 2011, 11:54 AM)

I don't like moving tanks with anymore water in them than needs to keep the sand wet.
Can you expand on why please?
QUOTE (doppelganger @ Mar 29 2011, 12:07 PM)

Just a thought on this... I don't have a BC but I moved my standard 10 gallon (albeit like 5 min away) not too long ago. It had less than 1/2 of the water in it and it was HEAVY. I'm by no means huge but I'm not small either. 6'1 210 lbs... but it was quite a struggle for me carrying it more than a few feet. Just be VERY careful with it as it's surprisingly much much heavier than it looks. Lots of help is always good as it's awkward to hold as well. If possible I'd suggest something like a dolly to wheel it or something flat and strong. I actually used a laundry basket with handles. It held up surprisingly but it was always on the ground being dragged when it could just incase.
With that being said, take as much water out as you can as I wouldn't tempt fate with the weight of the sand bed plus water. It can be done just be very careful.
thanks for the advice. wet water is heavy! especially with roughly 30 lbs sand and maybe 10 lbs rock to boot. I was thinking of useing those movers straps that move the weight to your forearms rather than relying on fingers/hands to grimp the tank.
Any more comments on the structural integrity please? Thanks!
fewskillz
Mar 29 2011, 02:29 PM
QUOTE (reeferRudy @ Mar 29 2011, 03:02 PM)

Can you expand on why please?
Why chance it? A new tank is a lot more expensive than an extra 5 gallon bucket. There are too many negatives and the only positive is it saves you a couple seconds. Not worth it.
StevieT
Mar 29 2011, 02:31 PM
+1
Take all the water our drain only to keep the sand wet. I move a tank once and threw the sand away, second time kept the sand. I rinsed the crap out of the sand the second time before setting up and believe it can be a waste of your valuable time when setting back up.
With sloshing and the risk it isn't worth it to keep the tank somewhat full. Not to mention the weight.
blasterman
Mar 29 2011, 02:47 PM
I tend to move a lot lately, and I had to make a choice between giving up the hobby or making my tank easy to migrate to a new home, apt, etc.
Some compromises I made:
- Smaller tanks. No piece of gear I can't easily carry up several flights of stairs.
- Bare bottom tanks. Perhaps this is the most obvious and cuts tear down and set-up in half.
- No piece of rock that can't fit in a small cooler.
fewskillz
Mar 29 2011, 02:51 PM
BB tanks are a breeze to move. Very wise choice if you have to move a lot.
reeferRudy
Mar 29 2011, 04:56 PM
QUOTE (StevieT @ Mar 29 2011, 02:31 PM)

I rinsed the crap out of the sand the second time before setting up and believe it can be a waste of your valuable time when setting back up.
So your saying that rinsing the sand is a waste of time? Or throwing away the sand is a waste?
I'm trying to keep the sand, preferably not stir it up as I never have stirred it up to begin with. Are we saying theres no real way to leave the sand layer intact without disturbance? Everything will shift from the move? I'd rather not go in and try to find my randalls shrimp, I think that would be all but impossible unless i am getting it all out of there.
So, remove sand or no? Wash sand or no? Thanks for all the advice so far, good stuff here.
StevieT
Mar 29 2011, 05:01 PM
I am happy that I rinsed the sand, it saved me from buying new and saved me from picking out CUC. But it is a time waster.
When you move you are on a tight time frame. Meaning the second you break down you can't stop and unless you have other life support, the clock will run out. Main thing is temperature. So the more time you spend doing whatever is "unnecessary" the more you risk your livestock.
Now both times I moved I had a huge garbage pail of new water waiting, so I could float corals/fish in the heated new water.
Keep in mind a new aquascape takes hours if you want it to look nice, that is where you should budget time.
QUOTE (reeferRudy @ Mar 29 2011, 04:56 PM)

I'm trying to keep the sand, preferably not stir it up as I never have stirred it up to begin with. Are we saying theres no real way to leave the sand layer intact without disturbance?
That will be almost impossible. It will shake up enough in transport and turn your water pure brown. If you save the sand a good rinsing is in order. Or simply get new sand.
fewskillz
Mar 29 2011, 05:14 PM
QUOTE (StevieT @ Mar 29 2011, 06:01 PM)

That will be almost impossible. It will shake up enough in transport and turn your water pure brown.
This, and the more water you keep in the tank the worse it will be and the more water you will have 'polluted'.
reeferRudy
Apr 19 2011, 04:28 PM
where can I buy the bigger thicker bags to bag up my livestock / corals? (the ones the LFS uses)
thanks! movin it this weekend... it will be the last to go.... arrrrg!
reeferRudy
Apr 26 2011, 12:24 PM
well, it took roughly 7 hours from start to finish. it wasn't as bad as I thought, though a few things I forgot to prepare for:
non abrasive pad to clean inside of glass when everything is drained/removed and you are hosing it out outside.
some type of bubble wrap or padding for large modular pieces of liverock w/coral that you are moving in a 5 gallon bucket to prevent shifting (I shattered a monti) it's gonna shift, count on it.
reclusive/sneaky livestock that hide in the rockwork, i had both my gobies move with my modular cluster of LR into the bucket (and hopefully my pom pom and a randals shrimp, those guys are MIA)
all in all, I think I may sell my tank before the next move! hahaha
StevieT
Apr 26 2011, 12:25 PM
Glad it went well enough. Moving sucks I don't know if I can do it again.
shaqdan
May 17 2011, 10:52 AM
I am moving my 29gallon into a 65 gallon this weekend. I appreciate the information in this thread. Of course, now I am wondering on what to do about the sand. Do I keep the current sand, buy new sand, or combine the two since the new tank is more than twice the size of the old tank? Any thoughts/suggestions?
Canadaeh
May 17 2011, 11:34 PM
QUOTE (shaqdan @ May 17 2011, 10:52 AM)

I am moving my 29gallon into a 65 gallon this weekend. I appreciate the information in this thread. Of course, now I am wondering on what to do about the sand. Do I keep the current sand, buy new sand, or combine the two since the new tank is more than twice the size of the old tank? Any thoughts/suggestions?
I am looking at doing the same thing, this weekend too. NOT ENOUGH TIME! lol
Have to source a 65, get it drilled, and bolster my stand as i dont think it would hold the extra weight of the double the volume of water and rocks. Move the overflow box from the 28 to the 65, tear down, move and reset. Get some large rubbermaid trash bins so get new water heating and mixing. I also have to get the water from the store to the garbage bin in my car in the 3 buckets I have. It is going to be quite a few trips to the water store and back to fill my buckets. Hopefully home depot can take back the trash cans afterwards as I wont need them both.

Im also working afternoons this week so my sleep is all kinds of messed up.
As for thick bags, ziploc freezer bags will be my method of attack on this one. and some nice towels fresh from the dryer to keep everybody warm.
Luckily I dont really have that much livestock so im not really worried. Rinsing the sand is goint to take forever! and another rubbermaid bin to rinse it in. Any tips on how to remove corals like frogspawn and trumpet coral from the rocks? i have puttied them on to the rocks and last time i tried to move my trumpet coral, i tried to pull it off and it shattered into 4 frags.

oh well now i can play with tank placement of the frags.
good luck with your move shaqdan and know that you are not alone! I will try to updae on my.... success after the weekend. I will either have a nice new tank, or a bucket of smashed glass. I Hope all goes well.
shaqdan
May 22 2011, 04:57 PM
My move was a success (so far). I ended up buying new sand and just adding some of my previous sand. Honestly, I had no idea how to 'rinse' the old sand, so it's a little dirty, but I'll live. I think it went pretty well. Everything seems to be doing pretty good. Zoas are out, toadstool is doing good. I likey.
Here's a crappy picture:
StevieT
May 22 2011, 09:36 PM
Good to hear, looks nice! I just took a rubbermade tote. Had some saltwater left over. Filled the tote with that water, sloshed it around, poured out the nasty water. Repeat until the water comes out cleanish.
Bat21Bravo
Jul 13 2011, 10:12 PM
Thank you StevieT, for a truly excellent guide. I must have read through this thread 30-40 times before I began to plan my own move. Although I was only moving a few blocks, as the Air Force decided to kick me out of the dorms at the ripe old age of 27, it still took me nearly 9 HOURS to complete it.
My advice: Plan, Plan, and Plan some more. Have plenty of bags and containers to secure all your corals and living things. I had several Rubber Maid containers (large) and at least 50 bags. Even then I found myself running out of options with the amount of corals I had obtained over the course of 1 1/2 years.
Further more, have PLENTY of fresh saltwater available to refill your tank as well as enough to complete several water change. I opted to remove all the sand/oolite I had in the tank prior to the move. I did this for several reasons: first, the oolite was far too fine to run both MJ1200's and a MP-10. Second. the amount of detritus that had accumulated under the rocks was staggering...after removing the rocks and nearly draining the tank, I could smell the decomposition.
Plan, Plan, and Plan some more. For 1 1/2 years I had my tank on the counter of my kitchen. Now, that I was moving I had to plan for a new stand for it. I researched the JBJ 28 stand but, was less than impressed. So, I decided that I was going to fabricate something myself. Realizing that several years ago I had relocated from upstate NY to Wyoming, I had neither the tools, nor the facilities to COMPLETELY fabricate something. As such, I began my journey at Home Depot. Within a few minutes I was able to secure a 24X24 cabinet for $7 (it was damaged). Later on, I also bought a 12X12 lazy susan and 2 24X24 Oak plywood panels. After borrowing a drill, I came up with this: (pictures to follow).

Before the move FTS.

The Mess.

Ready to Roll.

360 Degree Rotation.

Acclimation
StevieT
Jul 15 2011, 10:33 AM
Glad it was helpful and thanks for the additions. I like the acclimation tubs, much better than bags IMO. The one cool think about a move, if you allow the time, is setting up the equipment better than you had before. Since most add over time it is a good change to organize those cords and whatever else runs the tank.
I am sorry to hear the Air Force took away your nest
emc2
Aug 12 2011, 04:06 PM
Thanks for the thread. I am moving my 20L this weekend. I will break everything down early Sunday morning. I've read this twice and think I have everything I need.
StevieT
Aug 13 2011, 12:15 PM
Best of luck to you move
Twilton
Sep 8 2011, 06:30 PM
Thank you very much for documenting all this, it has really helped me to settle my nervs about my move. Given some great tips and advice. Thanks again
kevin_f
May 9 2012, 11:55 AM
John @ reefcleaners sent me over to this nifty little guide today.
I've been planning this for a few weeks now. I'm moving the tank 26th of May. I actually have off the whole week prior. I will be moving 15mins down the road & I'm able to set things up before hand at the house.(long story short, getting married, moving back in with mother to save money for a house)
50g cube w/ 18g sump.
My plans so far:
(already at the house)
15g container filled w/ premixed saltwater w/ heater & pump
15g container filled w/ premixed saltwater w/ heater & pump
15g container filled w/ premixed saltwater w/ heater & pump
Use 10g tank w/ heater/HOB filter/ air stone for my 3 fish to stay in. 1 melanarus wrasse, 2 b&w clowns
7g bucket w/ heater/pump for LR(possibly just buy a big Tupperware and put the rocks in it)
7g bucket w/ heater/pump for LR
5g bucket
5g bucket
Dr Tim's one & only
Battery operated air pump
Changing out my sand with Arag-Alive Fiji pink.
Still debating what to put the corals in.
side note: I now have an arsenal of jager heaters & maxi jet pumps
This is a "lo-fi" version of our main content. To view the full version with more information, formatting and images, please
click here.