Was at World Wide Coral today...barebottom observation..

rskillz

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First of all that place is a coral nerd's dream. Even though it sits back in an unassuming warehouse, once you walk in it is coral porn. Once I stopped oogling I made a weird observation.

I thought perhaps their giant Koralia magnums had fallen down to the base of their amazing 300g show tank until I realized they had the same setup on most of their tanks. They had their tanks barebottom, with two giant Koralias pointed at the bottom (almost resting on the bottom) with 3-5 Mp40s in constant Nutrient transport mode.

It really made me think about going barebottom and just how much better it is to run a low nutrient tank. The acros in this show tank were absolutely unbelievable. While I like the look of sand, I'm really starting to wonder...


Thoughts?
 
Meh... sometimes I think we're trying so hard to make these little environments so perfect it almost takes the fun out. At least thats why I want the sand.

Alternatively, I imagine that there are those that argue removing the sand bed makes life easier... my dad is a big believer in this. You just have to have a LOT of flow to keep everything and anything from settling.
 
Crewdawg1981;620319 wrote: Meh... sometimes I think we're trying so hard to make these little environments so perfect it almost takes the fun out. At least thats why I want the sand.

Alternatively, I imagine that there are those that argue removing the sand bed makes life easier... my dad is a big believer in this. You just have to have a LOT of flow to keep everything and anything from settling.

Yea. There are certainly different ways of making your tank happy, but I've run into a lot of issues with my sandbed in my current tank. There is always the risk of disturbing it (if you don't clean in consistently) and nuking the tank. I hate to even know how nasty the sand is in my 72 that isn't quite 1 year old yet.
 
I've read that you have to pay more attention to the parameters like KH, CA and Mag in BB tanks because you don't have the buffering from the substrate.

I don't know if this is true or not. Matt's (MvM) new 93 gallon is a BB tank. He may be the one to PM about this.
 
Acroholic;620327 wrote: I've read that you have to pay more attention to the parameters like KH, CA and Mag in BB tanks because you don't have the buffering from the substrate.

I don't know if this is true or not.

So you've never ran barebottom?
 
Rskillz;620328 wrote: So you've never ran barebottom?

Only when I was a baby, hehehe!:blush:

Never have had a barebottom tank. Thought about it, but like the more natural appearance of substrate. Also, you have to mount everything that goes on the bottom on a heavy frag disc or rock, or it gets blown around in a BB setup.
 
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