jeff_pdx Posted April 17, 2009 Share Posted April 17, 2009 I have a BioCube 14. Currently stocked with two clows, a yasa goby, pistol shrimp, and various zoaz and acans. I want to keep the stock look of tank, and I am considering either purchasing a media rack for the middle back chamber and configuring it with chaeto and filter floss, or purchasing a Sapphire Aquatics NC12/BC14 Protein Skimmer. I know the media rack will be the cheaper route, but I am not concerned about cost as much as benefit. So does anybody have and opinions on which would give the most benefit to waste removal and in turn water quality? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ThePremiumAquarium Posted April 17, 2009 Share Posted April 17, 2009 If it were me and assuming I kept a light bio load, I would go with the media rack, filter floss and chaeto. I would also add live rubble rock to any free area in the back. Garrett Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
COReefer Posted April 17, 2009 Share Posted April 17, 2009 small skimmers are useless in my opinion due to lack of dwell time in the skimmer chanber. That's a small enough tank that I think weekly water changes would be the best way to go. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
siskiou Posted April 17, 2009 Share Posted April 17, 2009 My first tank, a 20H with a HOB fuge, did wonderfully without a skimmer! I only had three fish, though, and mainly LPS and softies. Did a WC once a month. Was the stablest tank I ever had! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
downhill_biker Posted April 18, 2009 Share Posted April 18, 2009 I agree with what has been said above. With a small tank like that water quality can be easily maintained with your bio filtration(rock, floss, chaeto) and water changes. Water changes will help you maintain your chemical balance as well ie calcium, magnesium, alkalinity. In small tanks that dont cost much to do water changes I would do them weekly, maybe 2 gallons a week and you will see great stability and success. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
twogirls Posted April 18, 2009 Share Posted April 18, 2009 I agree with what has been said above. With a small tank like that water quality can be easily maintained with your bio filtration(rock' date=' floss, chaeto) and water changes. Water changes will help you maintain your chemical balance as well ie calcium, magnesium, alkalinity. In small tanks that dont cost much to do water changes I would do them weekly, maybe 2 gallons a week and you will see great stability and success.[/quote'] Yup, that's about it. Although I will defend nano skimmers a bit I agree most suck, but I forked out the money for a top of the line Tunze and it worked really good! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
pledosophy Posted April 19, 2009 Share Posted April 19, 2009 A skimmer is going to do the most for water quality in your situation IME. I have run many skimmerless tanks, honestly I'm not a huge fan of skimmers. That said, the amount of macro algae you can grow in that space is going to do little to help you. Filter floss and refugiums are not so good together IME. I learned much of this from Leng Sy. Chaeto will do good for some nutrient control removing ammonia, nitrate, phosphate and some other toxins, it is also a great place to grow things like pods that will benefit your LPS. But IME/IMHO unless your refugium is around half the size of your tank you are not going to see great benefits from those little critters. There is just not enough room for them to multiply to a large enough population to be beneficial. That leaves you with cheato as a filtering option alone. With all other factors removed cheato vs. skimmer, the skimmer is better. JME Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
downhill_biker Posted April 20, 2009 Share Posted April 20, 2009 A skimmer is going to do the most for water quality in your situation IME. I have run many skimmerless tanks, honestly I'm not a huge fan of skimmers. That said, the amount of macro algae you can grow in that space is going to do little to help you. Filter floss and refugiums are not so good together IME. I learned much of this from Leng Sy. Chaeto will do good for some nutrient control removing ammonia, nitrate, phosphate and some other toxins, it is also a great place to grow things like pods that will benefit your LPS. But IME/IMHO unless your refugium is around half the size of your tank you are not going to see great benefits from those little critters. There is just not enough room for them to multiply to a large enough population to be beneficial. That leaves you with cheato as a filtering option alone. With all other factors removed cheato vs. skimmer, the skimmer is better. JME I intend to disagree with the above statement. I am not saying you are wrong, I am just have a different point of view. I have always understood live rock and other biological filtration to be your main source or filtration. Nano skimmers are usually very poor in performance. With these two factors I would think that biological filtration from live rock, chaeto, ect. the weekly water changes should take care of the water chemistry. I do agree with not using floss, it tends to be a detritus trap and cause a rise in nitrates if not changed out often, very often. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ThePremiumAquarium Posted April 20, 2009 Share Posted April 20, 2009 I have used many nano skimmers and have never had one or seen one that is as good at keeping waste down as live rubble rock and chaeto. That being said if there were a really good nano skimmer out there that I were to try and feel confident in, I would still probably have the rubble and most likely make room for the chaeto. There are just too many benefits to miss out on without them IMO. If this was a larger system I would have a large, efficient skimmer, a good solid amount of live rock, and a large refugium. I would probably add a cryptic zone, a deep sand bed, more live rock and probably another refugium lol. Edit: Oh yes and if I did use filter floss, which I probably would, I would make sure and take it out regularly and clean or replace it with new floss. I feel that catching detritus from your system is a very good thing as long as the detritus is disposed of and doesn't just sit in your system for a while only to become a waste factory. I usually try an mock a larger, successful system when seting up a nano system. All things in equal proportions to systems that I have seen be successful shoulf result in success in theory(many, many factors affect each system) Garrett Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CA2OR Posted April 20, 2009 Share Posted April 20, 2009 I agree with the LRR and cheato with floss. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jeff_pdx Posted April 20, 2009 Author Share Posted April 20, 2009 Thanks for all the input. I figured I would get many different opinions on the topic. I think I am going to get a media rack and use floss (I intend to change out weekly when I do my water changes), and Chaeto. Once I get my rack built, does anybody know where is a good place to get some Chaeto. It will probably be a few weeks. Again, thanks for the answers. This group has been a great find!!! Jeff Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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