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jvision

Edmonton Moderator
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Posts posted by jvision

  1. A really nice mix is the Ps. cyaneorhabdos with Lab. caeruleus - dark and royal blue fish mixed with bright yellow, it's an awesome display! And, they won't hybridize. Get a few Valisneria and Java fern in your tank and you'll have a stunning display. Several years ago, we had some stunning stock of each around the province; I'm sure it shouldn't be too hard to find some good quality of both fish.

  2. For a 75, I personally would stick with the smaller ones - Afra, Saulosi, Yellow labs, and the like - if you want mixed breeding groups (keep to separate genera to reduce the chance of hybridization). Otherwise, if there is one or two that you like, you could get a group of one or two - zebras, socolofi, etc.

    I know a lot of people who will see 75 as a good size for pretty much any mbuna, and I've seen some very nice male-only displays with a wide range of Rift Lake Africans. Really, the choice is up to you.

  3. I've grown just about everything in Edm tap water. I do usually add a carbon suppliment (CO2, Metricide/Excel). The thing most people don't realize is that if you want plants to grow, they need to eat! Proper lighting is also important, but with a low-teck design, the color temp (or spectrum) is probably a bit more important. If you have a flourescent light, get a Daylight bulb - they're cheaper at hardware stores than at the petstore.

  4. I've never drilled tempered glass, but are you sure it's tempered? Most big tanks don't use tempered... just thick! I've only seen tempered stickers on small tanks with very thin glass. I've drilled lots of tanks. Get a jig to hold your bit steady as you're starting the hole, I've used veggie oil or running water to keep the bit cool.

    Good luck!

  5. Basically, you want something for mechanical and biological with space for the heater. I've even done a sump w/o baffles; just a piece of egg crate holding back some poly, and another to keep the scrubbies from getting to the pump. For flow, I always just gauged how the fish reacted; if it looks like it's too much, I just throttle more water back to the sump (put a T on the return and run a line with a valve back to the start of the sump)... I'll try to get some pics when I'm on my laptop again.

  6. Making your own cuts down on the cost, but you're still going to need at least a powerhead, or find a way to run it inline on a canister w/o losing the sand into the filter incase of reverse flow, for every tank. Air-run filters are great b/c you can filter many tanks w/ just 1 or a few mechanical pieces.

  7. I've had some over the years, have built my own a few times; however, last time I was running a fishroom breeding operation, I simplified a lot and went to HMF filters on everything. If you have a big bioload, they're great to add for a single tank.

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