Lugmos12 Posted June 24, 2017 Share Posted June 24, 2017 Hey yal, I'm new to the forums. I've been keeping freshwater tanks since about 2010. I have a 65 gallon freshwater with goldfish and 5 gallon planted betta. I want to start a nano reef tank, probably a 10g or 15g - maybe 20g. I don't want to start too small (5 gallon) because I know that I will want to upgrade eventually. As for stock, I want to have a pair of percula or ocellaris clowns, a few soft corals, and maybe (and this is a big maybe) an anemone down the road. I want a minimalist look. I've looked at IM Nuvo series, the Fluval EVO, and nano Cubes as potential options. I'm just undecided at this point. I also don't want to rush it and regret anything later. What I do know for sure is that I don't want to run pass $400-500 in budget. If anybody has any tips or recommendations on what brands, lights etc. let me know. Quote Link to comment
Lula_Mae Posted June 25, 2017 Share Posted June 25, 2017 to Nano-Reef! I'm planning a tank in the same size range and also want a pair of clowns and softies. Do you know whether you have a preference for tall versus longer, shallower tanks? A couple great options might be either the Nuvo 10 or the Evo 13 (or whatever it is lol) which I recently saw on Petco for around $140 on sale! The light it comes with would probably be adequate for softies as well, for the Nuvo 10 you could try something like a Kessil A80 or a PAR bulb (like the one I've got from Reef Radiance, or the one several on here have, the tuna blue bulb from ABI) in a lamp fixture for lower-cost options. You may need to upgrade the pumps and add a powerhead to either of these tanks for improved flow, and I believe there's several options for that. Both are pretty sleek looking tanks and good for starting with. If you decide down the road to add a nem, you can always upgrade the lights. If you need to spend less on your rock, you can try Reef Cleaners or Bulk Reef Supply for dry rock, and add a bacterial supplement and ammonia to get things started cycling. Fortunately, softies are usually pretty affordable. With one of the two I've listed, I think you could totally do a tank for under $400-500, at least for initial set up and a few coral frags! 1 Quote Link to comment
1891Bro Posted June 25, 2017 Share Posted June 25, 2017 5 hours ago, Lugmos12 said: Hey yal, I'm new to the forums. I've been keeping freshwater tanks since about 2010. I have a 65 gallon freshwater with goldfish and 5 gallon planted betta. I want to start a nano reef tank, probably a 10g or 15g - maybe 20g. I don't want to start too small (5 gallon) because I know that I will want to upgrade eventually. As for stock, I want to have a pair of percula or ocellaris clowns, a few soft corals, and maybe (and this is a big maybe) an anemone down the road. I want a minimalist look. I've looked at IM Nuvo series, the Fluval EVO, and nano Cubes as potential options. I'm just undecided at this point. I also don't want to rush it and regret anything later. What I do know for sure is that I don't want to run pass $400-500 in budget. If anybody has any tips or recommendations on what brands, lights etc. let me know. Don't budget. Whatever you plan, you spend more. Just write the checks bro. 3 Quote Link to comment
Nidilsky Posted June 25, 2017 Share Posted June 25, 2017 I opened a new "tank fund" checking account bout a month ago. Quote Link to comment
Lugmos12 Posted June 25, 2017 Author Share Posted June 25, 2017 46 minutes ago, Lula_Mae said: to Nano-Reef! I'm planning a tank in the same size range and also want a pair of clowns and softies. Do you know whether you have a preference for tall versus longer, shallower tanks? A couple great options might be either the Nuvo 10 or the Evo 13 (or whatever it is lol) which I recently saw on Petco for around $140 on sale! The light it comes with would probably be adequate for softies as well, for the Nuvo 10 you could try something like a Kessil A80 or a PAR bulb (like the one I've got from Reef Radiance, or the one several on here have, the tuna blue bulb from ABI) in a lamp fixture for lower-cost options. You may need to upgrade the pumps and add a powerhead to either of these tanks for improved flow, and I believe there's several options for that. Both are pretty sleek looking tanks and good for starting with. If you decide down the road to add a nem, you can always upgrade the lights. If you need to spend less on your rock, you can try Reef Cleaners or Bulk Reef Supply for dry rock, and add a bacterial supplement and ammonia to get things started cycling. Fortunately, softies are usually pretty affordable. With one of the two I've listed, I think you could totally do a tank for under $400-500, at least for initial set up and a few coral frags! What I didn't like about the EVO was that it comes all together so it seems like a hassle to upgrade separate parts. I saw the Fluval Flex 15g and that appealed more to me; has more space in the back as well. I want a cube-like look for sure. I don't like the wider tanks due to space limitations lol 30 minutes ago, Nidilsky said: I opened a new "tank fund" checking account bout a month ago. I actually have a 29 gallon sitting around so I'm gonna sell it to add it to the 'fund'. 1 Quote Link to comment
Clown79 Posted June 25, 2017 Share Posted June 25, 2017 Deciding on if you like cube or rectangular tanks will help. I have 1 of each. I prefer long to cube for nano tanks. Fluvl who are nice Innovate marines are nice You could also do standard with hang on filter which would be cheaper. The being said, this isn't a cheap hobby. 2 Quote Link to comment
Lugmos12 Posted June 25, 2017 Author Share Posted June 25, 2017 3 minutes ago, Clown79 said: Deciding on if you like cube or rectangular tanks will help. I have 1 of each. I prefer long to cube for nano tanks. Fluvl who are nice Innovate marines are nice You could also do standard with hang on filter which would be cheaper. The being said, this isn't a cheap hobby. I know it isn't cheap (on a side note I got my 65 gallon WITH stand for $124 new from a brand pet store and the manager gave me the lights/canopy for free lol). I just don't want to jump all in; want to take it slow and learn my way with saltwater/reef keeping. I've found that freshwater is a piece of cake once the cycle is established. I'm leaning toward the Flex since I like the box look. What turned me off from the nano cubes was the curved edges. Quote Link to comment
Clown79 Posted June 25, 2017 Share Posted June 25, 2017 The flex lighting won't work for corals. The evo is designed for corals Innovative marine don't have curved edges. Biocubes do Quote Link to comment
Lugmos12 Posted June 25, 2017 Author Share Posted June 25, 2017 3 minutes ago, Clown79 said: The flex lighting won't work for corals. The evo is designed for corals Innovative marine don't have curved edges. Biocubes do For sure. What I didn't like about IM was the lack of proprietary cover. So every brand/tank has it's series of pros/cons.The curved edges was a big turn off for me. There was someone with selling a bunch of IM tanks in my area 10g 20g - I'll see if I'm able to see some of them in person. Quote Link to comment
Lula_Mae Posted June 25, 2017 Share Posted June 25, 2017 28 minutes ago, Lugmos12 said: What I didn't like about the EVO was that it comes all together so it seems like a hassle to upgrade separate parts. I saw the Fluval Flex 15g and that appealed more to me; has more space in the back as well. I want a cube-like look for sure. I don't like the wider tanks due to space limitations lol I actually have a 29 gallon sitting around so I'm gonna sell it to add it to the 'fund'. If you like the cube shape better I'd recommend the IM 10 gallon. The flex is interesting but wondering how the bowed front would look as a reef. The bowed front would be a deal-breaker for me lol. 1 Quote Link to comment
Lugmos12 Posted June 25, 2017 Author Share Posted June 25, 2017 2 minutes ago, Lula_Mae said: If you like the cube shape better I'd recommend the IM 10 gallon. The flex is interesting but wondering how the bowed front would look as a reef. The bowed front would be a deal-breaker for me lol. I found this video on youtube: Flex 15 Reef Quote Link to comment
Lula_Mae Posted June 25, 2017 Share Posted June 25, 2017 4 minutes ago, Lugmos12 said: I found this video on youtube: Flex 15 Reef Interesting. I wonder how it works long-term? And if he has issues cleaning the glass due to the curve? Quote Link to comment
Lugmos12 Posted June 25, 2017 Author Share Posted June 25, 2017 1 minute ago, Lula_Mae said: Interesting. I wonder how it works long-term? And if he has issues cleaning the glass due to the curve? I saw another video review where someone pointed that out but didn't have any con/pro about it. Speak of the devil, I found a 29g nano cube on CL for about 200 LOL Quote Link to comment
Clown79 Posted June 25, 2017 Share Posted June 25, 2017 A lot of complaints on biocubes is the curve because of the viewing of tank and cleaning. Good point Lula_Mae- cleaning the curve on the flex would be a pain. You'd have to replace the lighting which will cost. If you can get a used IM 20g that would be great. Very nice tanks 1 Quote Link to comment
Lugmos12 Posted June 25, 2017 Author Share Posted June 25, 2017 I think I found the tank I'm going for: Nuvo Fusion Peninsula 14G It sits right between a smaller (5g) and a bigger (20g) so I'll satisfy my temptation to go bigger in the future. @Lula_Mae would a PAR bulb work for this as well? Quote Link to comment
Lula_Mae Posted June 25, 2017 Share Posted June 25, 2017 2 hours ago, Lugmos12 said: I think I found the tank I'm going for: Nuvo Fusion Peninsula 14G It sits right between a smaller (5g) and a bigger (20g) so I'll satisfy my temptation to go bigger in the future. @Lula_Mae would a PAR bulb work for this as well? That's a good choice, and since that's the tank that was used for the current Nano-Reef contest, there's lots of inspiration to go around! A PAR bulb (or two) might work over this tank with softies, but you may need a higher wattage, or may need two of them to get enough spread to cover the whole tank (still pretty budget option though!). I was thinking a pair of PAR bulbs over the tank I'm tentatively planning. Seems higher than 12w can be hard to find though. Quote Link to comment
Clown79 Posted June 25, 2017 Share Posted June 25, 2017 Coral compulsion par38 35 watt has a 24" spread. Full spectrum and dimmable. Its the only par bulb I have found available in 35watt and with that spread. The 14g is under 24" so it should work. I used a par38 on my 15g, it had shadowing but it was a cheaper bulb with 60 degree optics. Other options are aquamaxx nemolight Ai Prime Kessil Nanobox Quote Link to comment
Lugmos12 Posted June 25, 2017 Author Share Posted June 25, 2017 3 hours ago, Clown79 said: Coral compulsion par38 35 watt has a 24" spread. Full spectrum and dimmable. Its the only par bulb I have found available in 35watt and with that spread. The 14g is under 24" so it should work. I used a par38 on my 15g, it had shadowing but it was a cheaper bulb with 60 degree optics. Other options are aquamaxx nemolight Ai Prime Kessil Nanobox do I need special mounts for these bulbs? Quote Link to comment
Lula_Mae Posted June 25, 2017 Share Posted June 25, 2017 4 minutes ago, Lugmos12 said: do I need special mounts for these bulbs? You'll want something like a task lamp or architect's lamp. This is the one I got. 2 Quote Link to comment
Lugmos12 Posted June 25, 2017 Author Share Posted June 25, 2017 29 minutes ago, Lula_Mae said: You'll want something like a task lamp or architect's lamp. This is the one I got. Awesome. I just added that to my list. Thank you. i can't wait 2 Quote Link to comment
Lula_Mae Posted June 26, 2017 Share Posted June 26, 2017 19 minutes ago, Lugmos12 said: Awesome. I just added that to my list. Thank you. i can't wait Always exciting when a build starts coming together! 1 Quote Link to comment
Clown79 Posted June 26, 2017 Share Posted June 26, 2017 Ya, the par38 are great because you can use any light fixture. They just screw in like a regular bulb. Just ensure the fixture can hold the weight, the bulbs are heavier than standard lightbulbs. Building the tank is super exciting and addictive Quote Link to comment
Lula_Mae Posted June 26, 2017 Share Posted June 26, 2017 Yes, they are heavier. I can confirm the light I linked holds a 12w bulb with no issues and could probably handle a slightly larger one. Quote Link to comment
Clown79 Posted June 26, 2017 Share Posted June 26, 2017 Thats Good. I had a hard time finding a desk lamp that could hold the weight that wasn't $150. Quote Link to comment
Lula_Mae Posted June 26, 2017 Share Posted June 26, 2017 Yeah it's been a years-long search for me, and I finally just decided to give it a try lol. I'm glad it worked out though. 2 Quote Link to comment
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