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April 19th, 2008
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| | Fish Master
| How expensive is it to start a small nano? I am wanting to get a small nano.. just big enough for a small fish.. and a small reef.. nothing over 12 gallons size.. ? any suggestions? Would it be cheaper to get a reg tank and do a saltwater? |
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April 20th, 2008
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| | Fish Addict
| for a reef you need very nice lighting and live rock. both of which will be expensive. I have plans for a 10 gal reef tank nano and its around $280+. |
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April 21st, 2008
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| | Fish Addict
| Quote:
Originally Posted by steveangela1 Would it be cheaper to get a reg tank and do a saltwater? | What do you mean by a reg tank?
For a rough price estimate look at this link: Saltwater vs Freshwater |
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April 21st, 2008
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| | Fish Master
| I was wondering if it would be cheaper for doing a reg salt reef than a nano reef.. I have actually researched prices it looks like the nano reefs looks a bit cheaper.. am I right? |
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April 21st, 2008
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| | Fish Addict
| It will be slightly cheaper but they are also more unstable which can lead to lots of mistakes if you have not done a saltwater tank before. And mistakes in saltwater usually are not cheap. Just make sure you realize this.
You might be able to find the equipment for something like a 50 gallon tank cheaper if you get it used on Craig's List since they are more common then other size tanks.
Also if cost is a large factor compared to time and personal effort, you can DIY most of the equipment for cheaper and get the satisfaction that you made it yourself. Last edited by GreenMan13; April 21st, 2008 at 12:20 PM.
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April 21st, 2008
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| | Fish Master
| Thanks.. I have seen a lot of stuff on craigslist cheap... like 55 gal saltwater w/ the works... I am ocd w/ my tanks so care is not an issue.. I have ALOT of research and studying to do before I even buy my tank... I am just in the price shopping part right now... I want a reef.. I know that much |
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April 29th, 2008
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| | Fish Lore Newbie
| Nano's are great for smaller footprints. I am old school and think 10gal is too small, but others on here seem to ahve great success with them for FOWLR/Reef. Rule of thumb is roughly 1 small fish per 10 gallons.
Nano's are typically nearly complete systems with lighting and pump to do the job. If you want bigger, it is not much more for a FOWLR tank only, but when you get into live rock, Corals, and inverts it can expensive very fast.
I am finishing up planning on a 185 gallon Reef and when it is all said and done it will around $5000.00. My 24 gal Nano was around $550.00 including all fish, test kits ect. |
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May 23rd, 2008
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| | Fish Lore Newbie
| I have had a 12 gallon reef setup for around 8 months with no miss haps so fat touch wood 
I dont have a skimmer, as you usually dont need a skimmer in tanks under 30 gals (have one in my seahorse tank as i feed heavily with frozen foods).
I reckon it set me back about £100 (with employee discount). The LR is the thing thats exspensive in the UK i feel, like £8.90 per kilo, £12 else where.
Its do able and fairly easy tbh  |
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May 24th, 2008
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| | Fish Lore Newbie
| Not sure on pricing, as I get all my gear & fish for free (don't ask, just know that my father is obsessed, and loves buying anything aquaria-related for almost anyone), but I know that there are several things you need to account for. Here's a list for a tank similar to my own.
5.5 - 6 gal. tank
Live rock
Gravel/crushed coral (base)
Water
Filter
Sub Compact (lights)
Coral
Fish & other organisms (might I recommend a goby, dottyback, damsel, or wrasse)
All things said and done, this setup shouldn't run you more then a couple hundred bucks.
Hope this helped somewhat.
-Jon |
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May 24th, 2008
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| | Fish Helper
| Awh Jon, getting used to fishlore? 
I agree though, (after a while of researching, as i am strictly freshwater<3) a couple hunderd, maybe three depending on the quality you want. |
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May 29th, 2008
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| | Fish Bum
| i saw a 1 gallon reef tank at the LFS recently. it had a filter, a 15w fluorescent, live rock, and sand. there were 4 fishes in it (clown, orchid dotty, and 2 others) and some soft corals. the owner says he only needs to top off the water every day. |
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May 29th, 2008
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| | Fish Master
| Quote:
Originally Posted by mastercave i saw a 1 gallon reef tank at the LFS recently. it had a filter, a 15w fluorescent, live rock, and sand. there were 4 fishes in it (clown, orchid dotty, and 2 others) and some soft corals. the owner says he only needs to top off the water every day. | A one gallon reef tank? that sounds very small when in freshwater you wouldn't want to even put a snail in a one gallon tank. Thanks for all your replies.. I am going to prob hold off on my SW for a while, and focus on getting a bigger home for my mbuna cichlids, then in a year get a sw tank and do it up w/ a 55g tank instead of a nano, so that I can get exactly what I want. |
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May 29th, 2008
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| | Fish Bum
| i'm a newbie with a 55g SW. my advice - go larger if you can! even with a 55g, i'm still worried my stocking plans are too much |
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June 1st, 2008
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| | Fish Lore Newbie
| Quote:
Originally Posted by steveangela1 I am wanting to get a small nano.. just big enough for a small fish.. and a small reef.. nothing over 12 gallons size.. ? any suggestions? Would it be cheaper to get a reg tank and do a saltwater? | Hello Steve, I have a 24 gal. Nano Reef. I love it, but i do miss my 55 i use to have. If you can IMO you should go as large as you can. Beleave me, you will want a bigger one once you get started.  They are so much fun. Good Luck with your research, and check out some of our pics.  |
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June 4th, 2008
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| | Fish Addict
| I started actually two reef tanks at once, a 10 gallon nano and a 90 gallon. Both were pretty easy to set up, and both are full reef systems. My 10 gallon is just an old fish tank, but I've just recently purchased a Oceanic 14 and am going to set that up tonight. There are certain fish that can thrive in a Nano, smaller gobies, firefish, smaller clown species etc. Either way, lots of TLC regardless of size.
Take Care, Randi |
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