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Thread: Conversion of my Flueval Spec V Desktop Aquarium

  1. #1
    Join Date
    02-17-2014
    Location
    San Antonio, TX
    Posts
    88

    Default Conversion of my Flueval Spec V Desktop Aquarium

    I have a Flueval Spec V 5 gallon Desktop Aquarium at work that I have freshwater fish in, and it is boring me to tears, so I decided to convert it to a nano tank! I was able to pick up a Marineland reef ready LED Light fixture off of ebay last week, and it is 100% brighter than the crappy fixture that came with the tank. This last weekend, I picked up 10 pounds of white sand, new carbon, new ceramic bio filtration, 2 5 gallon containers of pre made salt water, and around 7 or 8 pounds of live rock. I plan on doing the transition over lunch, and taking the fresh water fish back to petco after work today. The LR I have is cured and ready to go, so hopefully the cycle will be a mini one, and I will be able to start adding coral in a week or two. My plan is to have mostly zoas, some acans, and maybe a few other LPS. As far as fish and others are concerned, a clown and a goby most likely, and some crabs and snails.

  2. #2

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    Sounds like you have a solid plan for making the switch. IMO, I wouldn't stick a clown in there, it is too small of a tank; however, there are some gobys that will remain small enough for your footprint. 5 gallons is more of an invert tank then a fish tank. Good luck with the setup and post some pics.
    ​88g L shaped reef
    150g freshwater cichlid

  3. #3
    Join Date
    02-17-2014
    Location
    San Antonio, TX
    Posts
    88

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    Your probably right, I was thinking a few gobies maybe, and for the most part, it will be inverts and corals.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    01-16-2012
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    Waikele, Hawaii
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    Be careful with that Marineland reef ready led on the shallow of tank. May be pretty strong. Those things aren't to good for a normal deep tank but when you have a shallow tank like that you may get more than enough light. Did you get live sand? It may help cut down on the cycle as well. Good luck. Post pics!

    Sent from my SCH-I545 using Tapatalk

  5. #5
    Join Date
    09-13-2013
    Location
    Fishing
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    3,229

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    We keep a Spec V. Weekly one gallon water change and it has been doing fine for 4 months now with a couple of gobies and a tiny baby clown. Just need to make sure you stay very diligent with the maintenance.
    Last edited by Dean; Mon, 28th Apr 2014 at 12:50 PM.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    02-17-2014
    Location
    San Antonio, TX
    Posts
    88

    Default Pic

    Desktop Reef (2).jpg
    Attached Images Attached Images

  7. #7
    Join Date
    02-17-2014
    Location
    San Antonio, TX
    Posts
    88

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    Not quite sure why the second pic is there, and I cant seem to delete it. Anyway, here is my desktop reef all set up. I did not get live sand, I used base sand with live rock, and the real ocean water from PETCO. I also added live bacteria to the water.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    02-03-2010
    Location
    New Braunfels, Texas
    Posts
    1,202

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    You should try a clown goby. I have a yellow one in my biocube at work and love it. Also have a yashi goby and pistol shrimp combo.
    Mitchell

  9. #9
    Join Date
    02-17-2014
    Location
    San Antonio, TX
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    88

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    I picked up a yellow tail damsel fish and 5 hermit crabs yesterday. Still zero ammonia and zero nitrates showing up when testing. Even with using all live rock, bacterial starter and real salt water, I assumed I would have a mini cycle. I plan on adding a small clown fish and a goby pistol shrimp pair, and then corals down the road.

  10. #10

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    Damsels and Clowns are both very territorial fish and you have a very small footprint, they may end up fighting constantly. Also, three fish plus a decorative shrimp is a large bio-load for a small aio tank, you may end up constantly fighting diatom/algae blooms from the waste they will produce.
    ​88g L shaped reef
    150g freshwater cichlid

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