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Timbo1

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First a little background info...

My 29 gallon tank has been set up for roughly a year and a half now. I'm an engineering student and attend college two hours away from home. Rather than take down my home tank, I opted to simplify it as much as possible and let my mother maintain it. My first year at school went okay but there were many aspects of my setup that I knew I had to change. On top of that, due to some learning curve type mistakes on my mother's part, the tank had a serious cyano problem.

The following is a documentation of how I took my tank down and restarted it using a more thought out and efficient approach. I consider my current 29 gallon tank a truly efficient and effective SPS environment and for those of you about to start a 29, I highly suggest you study the set up I used.

Preparation:

I started the whole ordeal by filling up a 20 gallon long temporary holding tank with fresh saltwater and filling an alternate 20 gallon reservoir with even more new saltwater. I then began to remove the most easily accesable rocks from the 29 gallon tank and placed them into the 20 long.

Taking the tank down:

Once the rocks were in the 20 long I thoroughly rinsed them down to remove any kind of cyano remains.

The corals were left in the 29 gallon tank on the sand bed. I allowed the 20 long to settle for a day and a half or so and then moved the corals from the 29 into the 20 long. I drip acclimated all livestock for several hours. Below are some pictures showing the temporary 20 long housing tank:

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Here I was trying to get a reluctant brittle star out of a rock

Re-Building the 29

I knew I wanted a drilled tank this time but there are no commonly available glass 29 gallon tanks with an installed overflow. I had an All-Glass 29 gallon tank drilled and then installed my own overflow:

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Next step was to build a sump:

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(next post)
 

Timbo1

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The sump incorporates a skimmer section, baffle area and then a small return section. A few months back, I purchased an MTC Pro 6500s air stone driven counter current protein skimmer for about 200 bucks. I installed this into my sump and fed it from the overflow. The skimmer is fed by a high performance, hydroponics air pump connected to two limewood air stones.

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After plumbing the skimmer it was time to fill it with four inches of South Down play sand and add water. The return pump is an Iwaki MD20RLT pressure pump rated at 480 GPH at four feet head. I connected this to two 1/2" stumpy model Sea Swirls. This Iwaki is the only pump on the entire system.

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A Reef Again

After allowing the tank to settle and the skimmer to break in for a few days, I began reconstructing the reef structure and adding the corals back. I only ended up using roughly 25 pounds of live rock this time instead of the original 40 pounds that I had bought. I left lots of room for clams and other sand bed dwelling animals.

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The rock on the left of some of these images is the rock that the brittle star refused to leave. I ended up giving him and the rock back to a LFS for some credit.

The only other thing I did was add a 250 watt IC ballast with an Ushio 250 watt 10kK mogul based metal halide bulb. This was an upgrade from a 175 watt ushio 10kK bulb. The tank has been running great for a week now, I'm truly excited with my setup and think that this system is an excellent way to run a 29 gallon tank for anyone else setting one up. If anyone has any questions or comments, please post them here and i'll answer them.

Tim
 

REEF-ER

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real nice post, i am thining about putting a 400w 10k on my 25g tank. as of now i only have 1- 55watt p.c. so i keep some shrooms, tubeastraea, yellow polyps and a flower anemone. thanks for taking the time to show us how u did it. also, everything looked great.
 

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