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What size nano tank do i need? 14 Big enough for what I want?

Jconnon07

Non-member
Hey everyone. I am new to the hobby and tried to do most of the research I could myself but I find myself with a few questions. I was looking to start a 14gal Nano reef cube. I wanted to put in a Royal Gramma, a occielaris Clownfish (or a pair!) and maybe a small goby and some inverts. My big question is, is that enough space for the Royal and the clown(s) to have enough territory to themselves, or should i step up to a 29 cube? Or would that/my other problem be pushing my bioload? Any advice and suggestions would be great! thank you!
 
I'm selling a 15 gallon column almost complete. Check out the equipment for sale section. The amount of fish your talking about is good. I have 6 fish in this tank now with no trace of anything.
 
For the difference in space between the two, go for the 29g. The pair of clowns and gramma are all fair sized fish to try to do all that and more in a 14g is unlikely to work out long term. Plus think about the space you lose with rocks, coral, etc. It doesn't take appreciably more investment to set up the larger tank and have twice the space to play with.
 
Rone thank you but I think I am likley to go with one of the cubes , but I am glad to hear they do well in the size.
Capslock thank you for your insight. I had similar thoughts what what I have read.
 
+1 for 29 gallon. It is a lot more stable and less work. Happy reefing.
 
I agree with that bioload I would say 29 gallon.
 
Thank you guys. I ended up getting a really good deal on a 14 biocube so I'll just do something different and get a 29 for a second tank one day. I'm going to take out the bioballd/filters and put either LR rubble or a in tank media rack set up. I'll post a start up thread soon!
 
Congrats on the purchase. With a 14 gallon I would go with a goby (if you put in a sand bed) and the clowns. The royal gamma tend to like more room to swim around in. I noticed when I started to over stock my 25 gallon with 2 clowns, the gamma, and a goby he hid more than anything. Good luck and keep us updated on what you put together!
 
Thank you. I plan on doing a start up thread in a bit and keeping it updated. I was planning on doing the royal and just 1 clown and I figured I'd max there. But I don't want the rg uncomfortable in the 14. I'm actually shocked at how its doing so well. In the picture below you can see that apparently in the LR I bought from a emmeber it appalesrs to have had Green star polyps on it that came to life after a few days! http://imgur.com/a/GHsHI
 
I run a 16 gallon Sera biotop Nano Cube 60 which is listed as 60 liters/16 gallons. I do not have a skimmer.

The tank has been operating since October 2013. Water changes seem to be the key maintenance item. I had it in my office for over a year and would set up an autofeeder on long weekends modified to output a small quantity of Hatchery Diet pellets which is also the main food. This is my first tank and I am happy with the compromises as it has kept me within a reasonable budget of cost and maintenance time.


I have two ocellaris clowns, a red high ray banded goby, pistol shrimp, barnacle blenny, yellow coral banded shrimp and cinnamon shrimp and other assorted inverts. These fish have been with me for over a year.

In my back chambers I simply have some rock and the heater. I supplement at times with filter beds of charcoal and nitrate or phosphate reducers.

The hood seems to reduce evaporation. Whenever I use the feeder which requires propping up the hood, evaporation increases substantially. I have an ATO if that stands for "Administer Topping Off" by hand.

Ironically since I brought it home I have had more difficulty maintaining a constant maintenance with some increase in algae growth. Montipora coral have thrived as well as my Duncan. My leathers have not changed much. My mushroom coral recently replicated after being fairly dormant for a year. So my conclusion is there is a lot you can do with a small tank and modest equipment if you stay constant. Stay observant and you may also learn.
 
i think any tank 55g or smaller can be called as a nano, depends on how you set it up and how you want it be called.
people named their corals after their own name so nothing wrong with calling a 45g cube (sump-less) as a nano. just my opinion
 
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