Have you considered if the spot you choose for the tank can support the weight?
Once you break 100 gallon we are talking a thousand pounds plus. Is the area a solid concrete or your standard floor joist? How old is the house? If joist are you going along the joist or across?
The weight really adds up quickly when you go big.
Water is 8lbs per gallon
The tank is another 200 plus lbs
Stand another 100 or so
50 lbs give or take is rock/misc decor
A pound per gallon of substrate
Filtration weight can vary, sumps being heavier but can plumb them to another location, Hobs and Cans being lighter.
My 125s weight in roughly around 1500lbs.
Well in that case get a 180 6x2x2. Then you can have all that you mention at the beginning, and add some more. Like the Flagtail and a school of catfish like Hopplos or Pictus.
If you can deal with the extra 6 inches of depth i'd go with the 180. My wife will not allow me to go out that far thus I'm sticking with the 135. But a 180 opens you up to some potentially larger fish that you can consider
That is what I'm targeting at this point. I'm investigating the cost and logistics of having something that big. Space-wise, I'm good to go. Are the factory built wood stands reliable for a tank that size?
That is what I'm targeting at this point. I'm investigating the cost and logistics of having something that big. Space-wise, I'm good to go. Are the factory built wood stands reliable for a tank that size?
As far as fish go, I'm pretty excited about doing a severum, flagtail, EBA, 5 geos, and some Columbian tetras . . . And maybe a few pictus cats.