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BigA

Edmonton & Area Member
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About BigA

  • Birthday 03/24/1980

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    aaronolson@hotmail.com
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  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    Millwoods - Edmonton

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  1. At fist glance this seems to be working. He brought some into the store (AE) as well as some standard SW and I tested it. All the levels turned out fine. I would like to see how stable the system will be long term.
  2. What about a dragon goby? Cool and unusual looking, pretty hardy as well.
  3. Ok. I may try one of them. What about tinfoils? My worry is that the oscars will kill off more peaceful fish. They've been pretty aggressive. Killed off a common pleco that was in there, killed off another oscar that was put in there. That's why I was thinking something more aggressive, but my client has made it clear that nothing bad happens to the oscars. Call it sentimental value. Thanks for the advice so far...
  4. I've been doing maintenance on a 150 gal tank, whose sole occupants is a pair of oscars. One 12", one 8". My clients would like to put more fish in, but they are apprehensive because the oscars are so large. Tank is filtered by an XP3 and a FX5, so filtration is not an issue. I was thinking of a couple more big cichlids, perhaps a red devil or jd, or something else. What would you do? Thanks is advance.
  5. I pulled out the impeller, cleaned it thouroughly. Everything is going good so far..... Thanks for the help.
  6. I rinsed it under the tap, I didn't try to take it apart though. Should I do that?
  7. ok. I cleaned out the filter, the hose, the intake, the spray bar. The output flow pressure is still fluctuating. Going from high flow, to low, to high and so forth every couple seconds. Any other guesses?
  8. Ok. Thanks Val. I'll give that a shot when I get home today.
  9. Last night I have had a problem with my XP2. The amount of flow coming out of the spout is fluctuating It was running fine when I went to bed. When I got up, the pressure coming out was varying kinda like this It does sound like it is sucking in air from somewhere, I rechecked all the seals and hoses this morning before I came to work, and all seemed visually fine. Also there is not any water leaking anywhere. Dry as a bone. I admit that I haven't cleaned the filter in a while, could this be the issue? Is it clogged? Or maybe a mechanical issue? Needing a new inpeller or new seal? Anyone have any thoughts? Thanks for the help.
  10. The worst part is it's all conjecture. No proof at all, just heresay. But a lot of the posters have already made up their minds on the subject.
  11. I think the issue will be with the clown loach's. IME, they like a much higher temp, 27-30 and need a much larger tank, 90-120gal to be happy. Also with them, while 3 is better than 1, 5 is better than 3, and 7 better than 5, and so forth. Optimally, the 13" pleco should be in a 90-120gal tank as well, butI sure he will appreciate any extra water he is given.
  12. That's not a bristle worm. I was just going on what was on the other forum. I personally don't know what it is.
  13. I'm not sure I would want one in my tank. Check out this thread on canreef about a person who found one in his system. Scary. and packs a nasty sting.
  14. As far as a skimmer, I would say it depends on the size and bioload of your tank. If it's a 20gal with 1 clown and some polyps, you can probably make do with just water changes. If it's a 75gal, stocked to the brim with SPS, a skimmer is a definite need. You will also need good lights. These will depend more on the depth of the tank than the amount of water it holds. In deeper tanks, light has a harder time penetrating to the bottom layers of the tank, and therfore more intense lighting is needed. You will also need a powerhead or two for extra flow. To successfully keep some types of inverts (some corals, anemones) you need to have quite a bit of flow to successfully keep them alive. I have a flow rate between 10x-15x the size of my tank, and I am not quite sure that it is enough. The 1 other thing I would recommend is a good timer. This will enable you to keep an exact lighting schedule which is very beneficial to coral growth. It will also help to minimize (I say minimize because you are guaranteed to get some) the amount of bad algae growth in the tank. If the timer as enough programmable sockets, plug in a powerhead or two. Then you can alternate the direction of the flow in the tank. This will help keep things looking natural and soft corals like Xenia really benefit from it as well.
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