New to Saltwater tanks

Welcome to your new home for saltwater reef aquarium resources and fun! Welcome to the family! :D
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Hi, I've had freshwater tanks in the past but am now itching to try out the saltwater hobby.
Been reading like crazy and my current plan is to pick up a IM 14G fusion to learn on and then get a larger ~75 gallon tank down the road and repurpose the small tank as a quarantine tank.
Everyone says bigger tanks are easier to maintain but they are intimidating with the volume of water needed and the attendant mixing station, RO/DI setup, etc. and I'd rather make most of my mistakes with less investment. Weekly water changes don't bother me.
Am I thinking all wrong?
Welcome to R2R! A larger tank is more stabile and it takes longer for things to go wrong but I actually think a beginner is better off with a smallish, but not too small, tank as a first foray into saltwater. I'd say anywhere between 10 gallons and 40 gallons is a good first tank. Big enough to have a little stability but small enough that water changes, scaping, etc. are not so intimidating.

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Hi, I've had freshwater tanks in the past but am now itching to try out the saltwater hobby.
Been reading like crazy and my current plan is to pick up a IM 14G fusion to learn on and then get a larger ~75 gallon tank down the road and repurpose the small tank as a quarantine tank.
Everyone says bigger tanks are easier to maintain but they are intimidating with the volume of water needed and the attendant mixing station, RO/DI setup, etc. and I'd rather make most of my mistakes with less investment. Weekly water changes don't bother me.
Am I thinking all wrong?
Welcome to R2R as a 20+ year Freshwater pro, you've come to the right place!
 
Hi, I've had freshwater tanks in the past but am now itching to try out the saltwater hobby.
Been reading like crazy and my current plan is to pick up a IM 14G fusion to learn on and then get a larger ~75 gallon tank down the road and repurpose the small tank as a quarantine tank.
Everyone says bigger tanks are easier to maintain but they are intimidating with the volume of water needed and the attendant mixing station, RO/DI setup, etc. and I'd rather make most of my mistakes with less investment. Weekly water changes don't bother me.
Am I thinking all wrong?
So, mistakes in this hobby are far more expensive because livestock is more expensive. Large volumes of water fluctuate parameters slower which is always better. Unlike your freshwater tanks where topping off your aquarium with fresh water was mainly for looks, keeping your tank topped off with freshwater on a salt tank keeps the tank at optimal salinity levels. If 1 gallon of water evaporates out of a 75 gallon tank, it's not nearly as bad as 1 gallon evaporating out of a 14 gallon tank. Your salinity swings on the smaller tank will be monumentally more challenging to control without an Auto-Top off system. Whereas with a 75 gallon system, it doesn't necessarily need one right away. Also, one of the things you need to master are food/portion control so you can keep nitrates and phosphates down, again, this is much easier to accomplish in a 75 gallon tank because you can put in a little too much food every once in a while and it will be more forgiving, not so in a small tank.

If anything, after spending over 20 years in this hobby, a small tank, especially pico tanks, are much more intimidating than large tanks.

Welcome to R2R btw, hope you enjoy it here.
 

IF YOU HAD TO TAKE A REEFING EXAM, WOULD YOU PASS?

  • Yes!

    Votes: 32 45.7%
  • Not yet, but I have one that I want to buy in mind!

    Votes: 9 12.9%
  • No.

    Votes: 26 37.1%
  • Other (please explain).

    Votes: 3 4.3%
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