<blockquote><font size="1" face="Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif">quote:</font><hr>Originally posted by davelin315:
<strong>In the world of reef aquariums, there is no such combination of the words "too" and "big". Ever.
I'll put a little disclaimer on that. The only combination of "too" and "big" that exists in the world of reef aquariums is when it is followed by "to fit through the door, or the window if I remove it and use a crane to lift it through" (that's a friend's true story, by the way) or "to fit in the room except diagonally" in which case, scenario 1 would already apply.
[ November 12, 2001: Message edited by: davelin315 ]</strong><hr></blockquote>
Is a yellow tang not too big for a ten gallon reef?
Is a skimmer that holds more water than the tank too big?
Is a carbon filter that holds 5 gallons of carbon too big?
Is a bull shark too big for my 20 gallon tank? How about a manta ray?
Would it be wise to keep a carpet anemone in a
5 gallon tank?
Are 6 foot vhos too big for a 2 foot long tank?
How about substrate size. Are 1 cubic inch grains of sand too big?