Works great and has no sharp edges.
Lucky me I live in northern ontario.
Endless miles of free sand, driftwood and an amazing array of rocks.

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Here is a calculator that will calculate silica sand. Just enter your tank dimensions and how deep a sand bed you want, and drop down the substarte to silica sand: http://www.plantedtank.net/substratecalculator.htmlPitterPatti wrote:I was wondering about how much pool sand you would put in a 75 gallon tank.
100 lbs, more? or less?
thanks
Patti
This problem can be reduced if you have critters that are stirring up the sand some such as dojo or horseface loaches. Just make sure you don't have too much sand. 1" or lessRubix wrote:> . . . snip .. . .
...something i am learning about right now is anaerobic gaseous pockets of air that get trapped in the sand. the sand should be 'stirred' every once in awhile to prevent these pockets from building up because they can be lethal to your fish (and lethal to your nose) when disturbed if the gas has been building up for awhile.
I knew there was some kind of snail that was good at stirring up the sand, but wasn't sure what the name was.gorhaf wrote:what about using malasian trumpet snales since they are substrate shifters would they help or would the dojos just eat them as quickly as i put them in?
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