I'm planning for a bigger tank already hahah! The 60-gallon Innovative Marine that is on the counter next the registers really caught my eye. It uses the calcium reactor substrate and looks amazing to me.Neptune has it in many of their display tanks...not sure if it is the best media for smaller / home systems.
Thanks for reminding me, he actually gave me a bit of his substrate to help my tank get started. I should hit him up!Michael runs it in his aquarium. He has great success with it. @H2OPlayar
the whole idea behind this is, if corals grow into the large substrates, it becomes a frag without u need to work the glue fragging etc.
There is a bunch from my old tank I can sell you.Thanks for reminding me, he actually gave me a bit of his substrate to help my tank get started. I should hit him up!
just go BB for high flow!
You're supposed to vacuum sand? I haven't in 20 years
I talked to one of the workers at Neptune Aquatics and they said they don't do anything to maintain the crushed coral substrate, and if I got that route to not to touch it and just let it be.I have used crushed coral as a medium for substrate and I will tell you it is probably worse of a detritus sink than sand. Sand you can siphon and easily mix around to get a lot of the waste in the WC to siphon out. With rushed coral, detritus can’t be suctioned easily and moving it around can possibly scratch glass and will scratch acrylic.
I’ve found in my tanks that carribsea special grade has been the most suitable for me in high flow tanks. I have 3 MP40s and an MP10 in my IM75 and the sand doesn’t move much.