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is this biocube worth it?

Discussion in 'General Chat' started by CarpCharacin, Jul 6, 2016.

  1. #1
    Mods please don't delete this thread. It has value. I am debating weather i should get this biocube or not. I have never had any saltwater fish and i was considering giving it a try, but stuff is expensive. I would need to retrofit it with LEDs, but should i give it a try, or steer clear? http://www.ksl.com/?nid=218&ad=40234391&cat=&lpid=&search=biocube%20aquarium&ad_cid=2 Does anyone here have fish?
     
    CarpCharacin, Jul 6, 2016 IP
  2. jrbiz

    jrbiz Acclaimed Member

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    #2
    I do not have a fish tank myself these days, but many years ago, I had a friend who had 15+ fish tanks of all sizes with all types of freshwater tropical fish and I spent a lot of time helping him with them and enjoying them, as well. The fish tank looks fine, though it is relatively small at 14 gallons so you would have to go with very small fish and not a lot of them. This is generally fine (people enjoy even smaller tanks, of course) except that you want to have a saltwater fish tank. Saltwater requires A LOT more work and effort due to the build up of minerals everywhere and other issues. Of course, the saltwater fish are much more colorful and fun to watch. But, if I was going to go through all the work of running a saltwater tank, I would want it to be larger for more fish and more enjoyment. I would also prefer it to be a more rectangular tank instead of square for better viewing of the fish.
     
    jrbiz, Jul 6, 2016 IP
  3. qwikad.com

    qwikad.com Illustrious Member Affiliate Manager

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    #3
    qwikad.com, Jul 6, 2016 IP
  4. CarpCharacin

    CarpCharacin Active Member

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    #4
    I just plan to have 2 black and white clownfish.
    I got one of my tanks, a 20 gallon for free. All the silicone was pealing, so i took it outside and cut all of teh internal silicone out while still keeping the tank together. I got GE silicone 1 and i resealed it. I have had that tank running for well over a year, and it has not leaked a drop. It is an old oceanic biocube, not a coralife one, so i am going to have to retrofit it with LED lights. I am going to get a rapid led retrofit kit and a protein skimmer. The wear does not really look that bad.
     
    CarpCharacin, Jul 6, 2016 IP
  5. jrbiz

    jrbiz Acclaimed Member

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    #5
    That should work fine, then. Good luck!
     
    jrbiz, Jul 6, 2016 IP
  6. CarpCharacin

    CarpCharacin Active Member

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    #6
    I am probably just going to spend the money and get a vortech mp10. Biocubes look so clean, so i don't want to put a cord in the tank.
     
    CarpCharacin, Jul 6, 2016 IP
  7. jrbiz

    jrbiz Acclaimed Member

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    #7
    A bit OT, but my friend eventually tried breeding some of his fish. He had these special breeding attachments to certain tanks and started with the easier species of fish (he had a lot of kinds of fish, all freshwater, for the most part.)

    Sounds like you are really into it so you may find yourself trying that out sometime. All I recall about it was temperature was very tricky, at least for him.
     
    jrbiz, Jul 6, 2016 IP
  8. CarpCharacin

    CarpCharacin Active Member

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    #8
    Most of my fish are cold water, if not all of them. Temperature is not an issue for me. I was looking and new biocubes are only about $100 more than that one. I would not be able to use the stand that it comes with, because there would be no place for me to put my equipment such as powerhead driver, led driver etc. I am still considering getting the used tank and a new stand.
     
    CarpCharacin, Jul 6, 2016 IP
  9. jv1999

    jv1999 Active Member

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    #9
    Eh. Aquariums. I'd rather buy an LCD TV that displayed an aquarium in HD. I bet it uses the same amount of electricity as an aquarium because I heard aquariums needed to be aerated and whatnot.
     
    jv1999, Jul 6, 2016 IP
  10. CarpCharacin

    CarpCharacin Active Member

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    #10
    I have had fish since before i could read. Fish are my passion. Aerators take very little power.
     
    CarpCharacin, Jul 6, 2016 IP
  11. qwikad.com

    qwikad.com Illustrious Member Affiliate Manager

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    #11
    It's a serious question... Do you eat fish? If fish to you more than just fish, its your passion, wouldn't you be thinking of your fish while eating a fish? I realize there's a difference there, but still fish is fish. Koi fish, for instance, looks like your typical fish. I heard of a farmer who raised veal calves for a living, he couldn't eat veal since it was too personal to him (not everyone can eat baby cows).

     
    qwikad.com, Jul 7, 2016 IP
  12. CarpCharacin

    CarpCharacin Active Member

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    #12
    I rarely do, but there are sooooooooooooooo many fish species. Some species of fish i don't like, and some species i really like. I would never eat koi & goldfish. Aside from the parasites, i really like goldfish and koi so i would never eat them.
     
    CarpCharacin, Jul 7, 2016 IP
  13. qwikad.com

    qwikad.com Illustrious Member Affiliate Manager

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    #13
    Almost any fish (especially the lake ones) have parasites. Not everybody knows or thinks of that when they go fishing. My bro loved night time fishing, mostly for bottom feeders, and that's the only type of fish I have hard time eating since they munch on all kinds of crap they find at the bottom. Catfish anyone?
     
    qwikad.com, Jul 7, 2016 IP
  14. CarpCharacin

    CarpCharacin Active Member

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    #14
    i know, but it is especially bad in carp.

    I am going to retrofit the tank with LEDs and use a controller http://www.bulkreefsupply.com/reefkeeper-lite-basic-digital-aquatics.html. Is the reefkeeper lite basic good?
     
    Last edited: Jul 7, 2016
    CarpCharacin, Jul 7, 2016 IP
  15. jrbiz

    jrbiz Acclaimed Member

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    #15
    LOL, catfish are ugly and hard to clean. However, prepared correctly, they are one of the sweetest, juiciest freshwater fish you can eat. Much better than trout, bass, pickerel, in my opinion. That said, I rarely eat freshwater fish due to the bones you have to navigate around.
     
    jrbiz, Jul 7, 2016 IP
  16. CarpCharacin

    CarpCharacin Active Member

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    #16
    I said carp, not catfish.
     
    Last edited: Jul 7, 2016
    CarpCharacin, Jul 7, 2016 IP
  17. jrbiz

    jrbiz Acclaimed Member

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    #17
    I was quoting and replying to @qwikad.com. :)
     
    jrbiz, Jul 7, 2016 IP
  18. CarpCharacin

    CarpCharacin Active Member

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    #18
    The tank is not a very good deal and i will probably end up staying with freshwater. Not because it is easier, but because i like the fish better. I may build a freshwater stingray pond eventually.
     
    CarpCharacin, Jul 7, 2016 IP
  19. jrbiz

    jrbiz Acclaimed Member

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    #19
    It's interesting that you prefer freshwater fish. My friend only had freshwater fish when I was involved for a variety of reasons, but he always commented that saltwater fish were more colorful and more interesting to watch. I cannot comment on that because I have really only been exposed to freshwater fish, except for a rare saltwater tank that I might happen to see somewhere. To be honest, I would much rather have a fish tank than the stinking mutt that we have crapping up the house, but the wife and kids love the dog...
     
    jrbiz, Jul 8, 2016 IP
  20. CarpCharacin

    CarpCharacin Active Member

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    #20
    Freshwater fish have more personality. Koi can be trained to eat out of your hand. Good luck training saltwater fish to eat out of your hand.
     
    CarpCharacin, Jul 8, 2016 IP