Neptune Aquatics

Which way should I go?

I would recommend a 75G.
Big enough to get a decent sized herbivore, good deep/wide rock-scape, and decent water stability.
Below that, and I think you will have similar frustrations as the 29.
If you can go bigger, great. 90G or 120G are sweet spots.
Don't go bigger than that unless you are really sure...

A fancy 73G all-in-one would be a Red See Reefer 350.

But there are other cheaper ones.
All in one is not really all that required.
Acrylic has scratch issues, but is light, better clarity.
Eurobraced is arguably better than rimless due to spillage and glass thickness.
 
I would recommend a 75G.
Big enough to get a decent sized herbivore, good deep/wide rock-scape, and decent water stability.
Below that, and I think you will have similar frustrations as the 29.
If you can go bigger, great. 90G or 120G are sweet spots.
Don't go bigger than that unless you are really sure...

A fancy 73G all-in-one would be a Red See Reefer 350.

But there are other cheaper ones.
All in one is not really all that required.
Acrylic has scratch issues, but is light, better clarity.
Eurobraced is arguably better than rimless due to spillage and glass thickness.
Got it.. but I wanted to keep it smaller. I am still working a deal, but I might go 40g.

I would never go acrylic, had a truvu before and its light but it's a pain to keep it clean.

Thank you for the advice [emoji106]

Sent from my SM-N960U using Tapatalk
 
I spent almost 20 hours over a weekend once getting coralline out of the inside of an established acrylic SPS system while it was running, I hope to never do that again. I love my acrylic freshwater tank, but never salt unless it's FOWLR or softie only.
 
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