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Cowslips Warren posted:Tank size? 75
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# ? Apr 29, 2021 03:43 |
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# ? Apr 27, 2024 01:46 |
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https://youtube.com/shorts/dtHrEYtEFgQ?feature=share I got a snail problem and a snail solution.
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# ? Apr 29, 2021 23:29 |
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Day 3 of my severum not eating. I know Prazi suppresses appetite in some saltwater fish, so hopefully it's just that but the angelfish are still eating like pigs.
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# ? Apr 30, 2021 17:29 |
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Hello fish goons, my brother and I were having a discussion on what to put in his tank and we got onto this tanget and I gotta ask, If I were to take something like this, clean the glass, cover the base in a sealant and ensure the glass and base are sealed together, would that be safe in an aquarium? All my googling is people making fake aquariums in jars or how to use jars to transfer fish between tanks.
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# ? May 1, 2021 08:30 |
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Leal posted:Hello fish goons, my brother and I were having a discussion on what to put in his tank and we got onto this tanget and I gotta ask, Yeah that would be safe but be careful there's nothing lovely in the wood base which would eventually rot so...
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# ? May 1, 2021 09:02 |
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VelociBacon posted:Yeah that would be safe but be careful there's nothing lovely in the wood base which would eventually rot so... That is a good point, since it would be getting sealed anyway there is no reason to just toss that base and get a flat glass disc instead.
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# ? May 1, 2021 09:13 |
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Why are you putting this in an aquarium, and how do you plan to keep it from floating.
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# ? May 1, 2021 15:39 |
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What are you gonna put inside of it? Also it might get covered with algae
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# ? May 1, 2021 19:07 |
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SerpaDesign on youtube put a terrarium in his aquarium https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h9rKepQaCXE it was always full of condensation inside and hard to see into - and he did an update a while later of how it was going. Stoca Zola fucked around with this message at 19:32 on May 1, 2021 |
# ? May 1, 2021 19:14 |
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I lost a bunch of fish yesterday. Motors in both filter units died overnight, water stopped flowing Tank went bad quickly and I was out working. Come back to my mother in a full panic. Luckily she had transferred over as many as she could catch to the other aquarium so most of the loaches survived. I am hoping they recover fully. Losses were the Bala Shark, two clown loaches and two mollies Never had two filters go out at once before, don't know how it happened. And of course it happened in the tank that DOESN'T have a lot of plants in it because of my rear end in a top hat pleco
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# ? May 2, 2021 12:16 |
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AtomikKrab posted:I lost a bunch of fish yesterday. Motors in both filter units died overnight, water stopped flowing Tank went bad quickly and I was out working. Come back to my mother in a full panic. Maybe a power surge? Might be worth getting a surge protector.
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# ? May 2, 2021 13:31 |
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VelociBacon posted:Maybe a power surge? Might be worth getting a surge protector. They were on a protector to begin with but maybe the protector has gone bad.
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# ? May 2, 2021 14:28 |
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Phi230 posted:I'm looking for one or two schools of fish and a few more fish in general to liven things up now that my tank is settled. I haven't gotten a new fish in a year or so. Just wanna bump this for the new page. I've been doing my homework and I've come up with some options: Celestial Pearl Danios? Honey Gourami? in addition to the couple I listed in the previous post
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# ? May 2, 2021 15:50 |
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If you don't want to top up your neons school, maybe add one of the other small kinds of tetra? Actually now that I think of it, they might not be mid/top dwelling. My sister has glowlight and pristella tetras that hang very low in the tank. I don't know if I'd add another gourami to the two you already have, maybe more glass cats, since 5 is a pretty small school? I feel like getting one new school and beefing up the school size of your existing fish might make for a happier community than adding smaller numbers of more types of fish. I don't think CPDs are top dwelling, I've seen them (only in videos) to be mid/bottom dwellers I think. Rasboras tend to be top level dwelling, I have dwarf shrimp with espei and emerald eye rasboras and they seem to leave the shrimp alone, I often see baby shrimp in that tank. Red tail rasboras seem to be mid to top dwelling but I think they are big enough that they'd harass shrimp. I think the blue eyes could be a good choice but the thread fins maybe not, I have some recollection that they are a bit touchy and better off not in a community. Ahhh it's hard making changes to an existing working set up, so difficult to judge whether a new addition will cause problems or tip the balance somehow.
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# ? May 2, 2021 16:46 |
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I'd put CPDs in the mid-top dwelling category based on my bunch. They definitely hang towards the top, but will cruise the bottom on occasion. I'm interested to see how they do once they're out of a shallow 10 gallon and in the much deeper 40. My pearl gourami came to me so large I'm hesitant to put the lil guys in until they're a bit bigger.
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# ? May 3, 2021 04:02 |
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I'm very eager to get my little rainbows out of the 15g and into the 100g with their parents but they're still too small and they grow very slowly. I've heard it takes 9 months to raise them to full size so we're nearly half way there and I think the rasboras could still eat them if they wanted, at the size they are now. I really don't want to see that after the challenge of raising them.
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# ? May 3, 2021 10:04 |
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The weird potential parasite nodules on the angels are gone. The one angel's eye is still cloudy. The severum hasn't eaten since all this started, and I am still finding white stringy poops when I clean the tank. Saturday I put carbon in the filter to give them a break before my next round of treatment. I figure if it is parasites I should have a couple days where I'm waiting for eggs to hatch. Severum looks more active this morning, but still no interest in food. There is an aquatic veterinarian that has a video about parasites and she says they are actually extremely rare (she's seen 3 out of 500 cases) in anything but wild caught fish. She says the stringy clear poops just mean the fish hasn't eaten anything lately and that people just throw medications at fish for no real purpose. This explanation doesn't make any sense to me because it ignores the fact that so many tropical fish are bred in outdoor commercial facilities, then shipped to wholesalers and pet stores where everything is kept on the same system. At least in terms of potential internal parasites that seems to me to be effectively the same as wild caught. It also ignores the theory that some parasites are always there but fish can keep them at bay until they get stressed. It seems wrong to me, but she's a DVM and I'm not so I don't really know.
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# ? May 3, 2021 12:40 |
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Bulky Bartokomous posted:The weird potential parasite nodules on the angels are gone. The one angel's eye is still cloudy. The severum hasn't eaten since all this started, and I am still finding white stringy poops when I clean the tank. Saturday I put carbon in the filter to give them a break before my next round of treatment. I figure if it is parasites I should have a couple days where I'm waiting for eggs to hatch. Severum looks more active this morning, but still no interest in food. I once had a human doctor tell me to take some pills called Nunca or some poo poo for my horrible sinus issues. They're placebo pills. OOC what foods are you offering?
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# ? May 3, 2021 14:02 |
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I wonder how you can tell how many parasites there are when dead pets are flushed, binned, or buried, not autopsied. Are they sampling from breeders? From pet stores? I know in Australia with fish imports they were taking samples of live fish, killing and testing for disease and for a while they were talking about killing quite a high number in order to prove an import was safe. It would have driven up prices and crippled the hobby so I think it didn't escalate here like we feared it would. Hobbyists argued that there was no history of tropical fish disease escaping to the natural waterways, the one time it happened it was from fish farmers feeding iridovirus infected fish to their livestock against all recommendations, combined with unfavourable water temperatures. Anyway I can't see that kind of sampling happening in the US where imports seem very open and lax, so it does make me wonder where the data is coming from. Was she talking about internal or external parasites or both? I've heard it argued that external parasites are under-studied and misunderstood, that what people treat as ich often isn't ich, and so on. I have also heard that stringy clear poop is just fish diarrhea, which could be from internal bacterial infections or even viral reasons I would imagine? Is there anyone studying viral diarrhea in fish? Very unlikely but it seems like a plausible cause for disease, something that could spread easily, be untreatable, and most likely not be fatal. I can see why people like Rachael O'Leary swear by keeping clean water and feeding well over blanket medicating; doing lots of water changes would flush disease out of the water column and nutritional support helps a fish fight its way back to health. Anyway I think that disease is always present, we literally can't disinfect our tanks, there's filth on every surface all the time and that's fine when tanks are getting water changes and organics/wastes aren't building up and the fish have healthy immune systems.
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# ? May 3, 2021 14:48 |
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Cowslips Warren posted:I once had a human doctor tell me to take some pills called Nunca or some poo poo for my horrible sinus issues. They're placebo pills. Tetra Chiclid sticks. This Severum has never eaten anything that isn't floating. If it gets to the gravel it's going to rot unless I remove it. Which is weird because he likes moving gravel, so its not like he doesn't know how to aim down. I try to feed him frozen krill sometimes but same issue, if he doesn't notice it while it's sinking, it's not going to get eaten. This is exacerbated by the fact that whenever I come over to the tank he hides behind plants in the corner.
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# ? May 3, 2021 15:51 |
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Phi230 posted:Just wanna bump this for the new page. I've been doing my homework and I've come up with some options: I've had both threadfins and gertrudes, they would be a good addition provided your current gouramis aren't inclined towards fin nipping (for the threadfins). I wouldn't add another gourami if the two you have are getting along. They danios and rainbows are schooling, and would be happiest in groups of 9-12, although my threadfins will happily school with similarly sized fish and get along well with tetras. One of my males is persistently courting a green tetra, who is very confused by his overtures. I'm a fan of threadfins - they're gorgeous, peaceful and fun to watch when the males flare at each other. I've never had a physical altercation and my school is heavily male right now.
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# ? May 3, 2021 20:42 |
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Bulky Bartokomous posted:Tetra Chiclid sticks. This Severum has never eaten anything that isn't floating. If it gets to the gravel it's going to rot unless I remove it. Which is weird because he likes moving gravel, so its not like he doesn't know how to aim down. He might like Vibra bites from hikari. It's designed to look like bloodworms (and tastes I guess? I asked, but the fish just kept staring as I held a jar of food). It's also designed to sink slowly, so fish can attack a tasty snack.
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# ? May 4, 2021 02:57 |
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Apparently there's a Furan 2 shortage. June 1st is the earliest delivery I can find. I'll have to hope one of the specialty fish stores in town has some but I know the one closest to me doesn't have much in the way of dry goods. With the rise of Amazon and Chewy I can't say I blame them.
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# ? May 5, 2021 02:16 |
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I successfully moved my 7.5 gal walstad shrimp tank to my new apartment today. I had been sweating it for weeks and had actual dreams about the process failing, like the ones you have about teeth falling out but it was all the shrimp lying dead in the dwarf hair grass. I have about 2” of soil and gravel and drained the water level down to about 1” above that. I couldn’t bring myself to break down the entire tank since it has only been up for about 10 months and all the plants are thriving and the dwarf hair grass has spread out to a nice carpet. There was no way I was going to be able to catch all the shrimp and babies either. I ended up using an offcut bit of 3/4” plywood with a bit of foam padding held level with the top of the shelf it was on, and slid it directly over. Installation was reverse of removal and after carefully shining light through all the edges of the glass panes I didn’t see any evidence of cracking or silicone giving way. I’m going to give it a few days to see if anything leaks before I put all my books on the lower shelves though. I did break down my 15 gal with a school of guppies a few days before the move. They live on the back porch in a large home depot tote now, and I think I am going to keep them there permanently. I need to set up the 15 gal tank again and get it cycled, then I’ll look into some new stocking options. I think I might go with some actual red cherry shrimp for this one, as my 7.5 gal has a bunch of natural color and chocolate + blue mutts from cross breeding the bargain bin assortment I ordered when I wasn’t sure they would all survive. Now that I have a better handle on it, I don’t mind dropping the dime on the more expensive pure red ones. I would like to find some kind of fish that hang out near the top or middle of the tank, and could ideally maintain or grow their own population - perhaps another live bearer species, since the guppies seemed to really enjoy their time there and it was neat to watch them grow up without tending to eggs or breeder boxes. I think the shrimp would also breed well and not be threatened too much since there are two rather large bits of driftwood with lots of hiding spots for them to hang out in while they grow out.
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# ? May 5, 2021 06:00 |
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Daisy's Rice fish might be a good alternative, or maybe clown killifish, both are small and in a well planted, gently filtered tank they have a chance of breeding and fry surviving since the kind of plant cover that shrimp like is also good for fry to hide in. Kubotai rasboras might work too, or dwarf rasboras, or trigonostigma (harelquin, espei, hengeli) - as long as there are some fine leaved dense plants for fry to hide in, a mature tank can result in fry raising themselves without intervention as long as there is a population of infusoria growing. Or you could supplement with powdered fry food which the shrimp will eat too. You don't need to collect eggs or mess around if you just want to let nature take it's course. Shrimp safe filtration is fry safe filtration and I think that's a pretty big factor in fry survival as well. Livebearers, on the other hand, will breed and fill the tank more quickly than the shrimp will. In my experience with livebearers you want them in as big a tank as possible for a self sustaining colony so that they have room to grow to old age while the young fry are still coming. I've got some feral wild type guppies that don't eat their own young and you might find the same if you try endlers - which is nice if you're trying to breed them to sell, but not so nice if you just want a sustainable tank. For a long term colony type tank I don't think livebearers are a good idea, at least not in a 15g tank.
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# ? May 5, 2021 07:01 |
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Stoca Zola posted:Daisy's Rice fish might be a good alternative, or maybe clown killifish, both are small and in a well planted, gently filtered tank they have a chance of breeding and fry surviving since the kind of plant cover that shrimp like is also good for fry to hide in. Kubotai rasboras might work too, or dwarf rasboras, or trigonostigma (harelquin, espei, hengeli) - as long as there are some fine leaved dense plants for fry to hide in, a mature tank can result in fry raising themselves without intervention as long as there is a population of infusoria growing. Or you could supplement with powdered fry food which the shrimp will eat too. You don't need to collect eggs or mess around if you just want to let nature take it's course. Shrimp safe filtration is fry safe filtration and I think that's a pretty big factor in fry survival as well. Thanks for this, that definitely helps narrow things down. I do plan on keeping it heavily planted, it already has lots of java moss, frogbit, bacopa and an amazon sword all ready to go back in. I had also knocked back the flow rate on the pump and added extra pre-filter sponge to the intakes for the ghost shrimp and betta that lived in there before I put the guppies in, so it looks like it is in good shape too. Not really looking to breed for sale or move to a larger tank, so I think I will definitely skip the livebearers. Edit: the Daisy’s Ricefish seems like the perfect choice here, excellent recommendation. ickna fucked around with this message at 07:43 on May 5, 2021 |
# ? May 5, 2021 07:37 |
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I think my betta is horny. I did my best to not disturb his bubble nest while I was doing a water change. But I did disturb it and I feel awful for disturbing it.
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# ? May 5, 2021 12:15 |
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nunsexmonkrock posted:I think my betta is horny. I did my best to not disturb his bubble nest while I was doing a water change. But I did disturb it and I feel awful for disturbing it. It means he's thriving :3
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# ? May 5, 2021 13:47 |
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nunsexmonkrock posted:I think my betta is horny. I did my best to not disturb his bubble nest while I was doing a water change. But I did disturb it and I feel awful for disturbing it. Don’t—if you hadn’t given him a reason to fix and rebuild it he’d have done it anyway
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# ? May 5, 2021 14:32 |
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He is already rebuilding it again. I think he is happy and horny.
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# ? May 5, 2021 15:57 |
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nunsexmonkrock posted:He is already rebuilding it again. I think he is happy and horny. Nothing to do with horny (every animal is hungry and horny 100% of the time because that's what ensured the successful propagation of their species), they just do that when conditions are roughly correct in their environment.
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# ? May 5, 2021 21:57 |
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VelociBacon posted:every animal is hungry and horny 100% of the time because that's what ensured the successful propagation of their species
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# ? May 6, 2021 17:24 |
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How hot do you guys keep your aquariums? Right now I'm at 83F, which is kinda high but they seem to do better than when it got too cold.
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# ? May 6, 2021 17:30 |
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BONGHITZ posted:How hot do you guys keep your aquariums? Right now I'm at 83F, which is kinda high but they seem to do better than when it got too cold. Depends entirely on what you have in there but my shrimp tank runs 72F-78F in the summer with no heater in it just with the fluctuation in the living room temp. In the winter (when it would dip below 70F) I run a small heater and the temp is essentially 76F constantly. VelociBacon fucked around with this message at 17:44 on May 6, 2021 |
# ? May 6, 2021 17:42 |
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Our reef has been doing nicely lately. Red Sea Peninsula 650. Bruce Boxlicker fucked around with this message at 17:52 on May 6, 2021 |
# ? May 6, 2021 17:42 |
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So far, sitting steady at 24.5 SI temp units above freezing. I think that's around 76. Shrimp, rasboras and mystery snail seem to be happy.
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# ? May 6, 2021 17:55 |
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Bruce Boxlicker posted:Our reef has been doing nicely lately. Red Sea Peninsula 650. that looks awesome! How’s everything holding up? I really want to love those Red Sea Reefers, but stuff like the included sump being made out of somewhat thin glass gives me pause.
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# ? May 6, 2021 18:15 |
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that looks awesome! how hard is it to keep the glass clean with that much natural light?
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# ? May 6, 2021 18:17 |
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Ok Comboomer posted:that looks awesome! How’s everything holding up? Thanks! It's like 3.5 years old right now. I had a major crash due to not paying attention to my phosphates. It's been doing very well since then. The sump is made out of 1/2" glass, not sure what you mean. Maybe some of the smaller tanks are like that? The overall tank/stand/sump has been great honestly despite having major concerns about the stand. Enos Cabell posted:that looks awesome! how hard is it to keep the glass clean with that much natural light? Thank you. As long as the nitrates/phosphates stay under control it's no problem at all. We were concerned it would be but it's not.
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# ? May 6, 2021 18:39 |
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# ? Apr 27, 2024 01:46 |
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Bruce Boxlicker posted:Thanks! It's like 3.5 years old right now. I had a major crash due to not paying attention to my phosphates. It's been doing very well since then. The sump is made out of 1/2" glass, not sure what you mean. Maybe some of the smaller tanks are like that? The overall tank/stand/sump has been great honestly despite having major concerns about the stand. Great to hear I must be thinking about older or smaller models, but I remember it being a big complaint with some people when I last looked at them a while ago Maybe the complaint was simply that the sump was glass, period. A lot of people understandably prefer acrylic, but also a lot of people prefer DIY’ing their sumps out of Petco tanks that definitely have thin glass so—
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# ? May 6, 2021 18:45 |