I'm not sure the scientific name on the cat there's a few pics of them doing a google image search, but I don't think there's too many out there with nasty teeth.
Never cared for rays? That's tom foolery!
I don't see how people can even have tanks without them!?! They are the only reason I can justify being in this hobby as deep as I am. Only way to ever recoop and money. Everything else is just a money pit. Can't make money on them but at least they can help out with the bills a bit. I was hooked after having them in a pond and being able to hand feed them. Once a pup is born resistance is futile..... It's hard for me to even have a salt tank and not have one in there. It's a pain to get them here, as I'm not sure I've ever even seen a Motoro in a shop in Iowa. But thanks to the interweb it's possible for a hillbilly like me to get my hands on some pretty crazy rays. IF I didn't know what was out there and only knew about what I'd seen in the flesh I probably wouldn't be into them either.
I overlooked the sump thing.... No way I'd ever set up a tank without one unless it was for ray pups, that's the only thing I'd even consider running canisters on. Hate canisters. Can't check them like a sump. Better mechanical filtration with a sump. I fought bacterial outbreaks on my rays all the time starting out using HOBs and canisters. Happened less with monster wet dries in sumps. Even less after adding a moving bed. Now I'm sold on them. May try beads someday when I have money, but for now the ol sump and moving bed (bio reactor) are tried and true.
I'm not sold on the wider being better if your talking fish that stay managable (under 2'). Thinking it over I'd keep the 8' tank. You're giving up room in footprint. 6 inches isn't worth the 2' in my opinion. I have a pair of 6x3s and have had a 8x2.5 and I'd trade a 6x3 for a 8x2.5 in a heartbeat. That extra 2 foot is a lot to a fish that likes to stretch its fins.
That being said, if you haven't seen the video of the guys drilling glass on gl*******s.com then watch it, order up a holesaw and some bulkheads and kiss that fear of knocking a hole in glass tanks goodbye. The thought alone of drilling a hole in a glass tank freaked me out for over a decade. Now I'd feel comfy doing it after a half dozen moonshine shots...... lol
Building the system that is the life support for your monsters is half the fun.......
Just my 2 pennies..... lol
Never cared for rays? That's tom foolery!
I overlooked the sump thing.... No way I'd ever set up a tank without one unless it was for ray pups, that's the only thing I'd even consider running canisters on. Hate canisters. Can't check them like a sump. Better mechanical filtration with a sump. I fought bacterial outbreaks on my rays all the time starting out using HOBs and canisters. Happened less with monster wet dries in sumps. Even less after adding a moving bed. Now I'm sold on them. May try beads someday when I have money, but for now the ol sump and moving bed (bio reactor) are tried and true.
I'm not sold on the wider being better if your talking fish that stay managable (under 2'). Thinking it over I'd keep the 8' tank. You're giving up room in footprint. 6 inches isn't worth the 2' in my opinion. I have a pair of 6x3s and have had a 8x2.5 and I'd trade a 6x3 for a 8x2.5 in a heartbeat. That extra 2 foot is a lot to a fish that likes to stretch its fins.
That being said, if you haven't seen the video of the guys drilling glass on gl*******s.com then watch it, order up a holesaw and some bulkheads and kiss that fear of knocking a hole in glass tanks goodbye. The thought alone of drilling a hole in a glass tank freaked me out for over a decade. Now I'd feel comfy doing it after a half dozen moonshine shots...... lol
Building the system that is the life support for your monsters is half the fun.......
Just my 2 pennies..... lol
