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#1
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Well I just purchased a new home, and will be moving in about 2 weeks. As if moving isn't bad enough, I have a tank to move too. Its a 75g tank with a sump, a good amount of livestock including a few nice sized SPS colonies. So... Does anyone have any tips as to how to sucessfully break down, transport, and set back up a tank without destroying the stability and risking the lives of my livestock?
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We are the music makers, and we are the dreamers of dreams. |
#2
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get lots of big bins for livestock and LR.....
I just did a move and the only thing I lost (due to my fault) was a seahare. put LR in seperate bins based on if they have coral attached or not...put livestock in another bin....make sure you have heaters and watermovement. The coral bin, have a temp light set-up....for livestock....get a cheap clip on light.... try to save as much water and sand from tank as you can..... put tank in new location add old tank water, add sand, add base rock, wait a day and then add coral....add livestock a day later... do 10% water change...... I had my stuff like this for 4 days...no issues (except the seahare). Good luck
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A wasted weekend is not a weekend wasted! |
#3
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when I moved I had a spare tank that I set up ahead at the new location and filled it half way with water from water changes from old tank, rest as newly made salt water. that way when you move livestock over there is minimal stress. when you move coral and fish, be sure and use buckets with lids on them! Big Brute garbage cans with wheels work great. If you don't have any see if fellow local reefers will loan then to you. good luck.
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#4
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Save as much water as you can.
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Ralph Mendoza Jr. Long Beach, CA |
#5
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only save a small amount of sand to seed the bed bin the rest.
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Avatar: Orangutan crab in lps coral mabul borneo in july 2006. Photo taken by myself 18 metres |
#6
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if you have a long water change hose
or can buy one from lfs/hardware store - however many feet you will need from tank out to vehicle hook up to your return pump. place couple brute garbage cans in your moving truck pump water right out of the tank into your garbage cans sitting in truck... move LR to your newly filled bins in truck.... handle your corals as necessary. once in the new location just do it in the reverse order. doing it this way you are making things as easy as possible and going to bring all water w/ you.... not having to carry a bunch of bins etc regards |
#7
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Have moved two tanks twice. Once a few miles and recently to another state! rule of thumb. After 4 hours bacteria will die. Have a plan and plan well. we siphoned water to two large trash bins-placed rock in those. 5gal buckets used for corals. Tanks left quarter of water and sand and fish. Yeah was heavy but used dolly and truck and men! Was a 4 hour drive. put water, rocks, corals back in tanks and didn't touch for a few days. After all calmed down-rearranged and didn't loose anything.
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When in doubt, take it out! ........ I'm not bad...I'm just drawn that way! |
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