25 gallon system 600 gallon flood.

I hated lugging 5 gallon jugs. So I built another stand. But in a 37g tank as my ato. I have my rodi line ran to the tank. But I turn it on manually. Takes about 3-4 hrs to fill and I'm good for the month. This is in my livingroom. So I sit right on the couch and make sure it gets shut off.
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Im sorry for your "event" and as you see, you are not alone. In my case, to make things easier,I installed a RODI in a closet located in our fish room to get through the freezing weather. Well after making a batch I didn't turn the valve all the way before we left for an evening out. The next morning....oh well, I guess you get it..
We called Service Master, the insurance company and after a week of fans and heaters killing our power bill we went to HD and picked out a new vinyl floor to replace the soggy carpet with a $1,000 deductable.
Our real pain is the tanks have been torn down 6 weeks.
So out goes the RODI until the next freeze.

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The consequences.

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Just a quick note about the alarms. 110 dB is really loud....like super rockin concert loud. 125+ dB is painful and instant hearing damage. 140 is standing right next to a jet engine....so just be careful with what you buy.
 
Well a week later and all is well.
Decided not to quit. Also the carpet was going to come out anyways and be replaced with laminate floor so that turned out will turn out well. i lost no possessions by sheer luck of having cleaned up the room and stacked everything on top of two plastic bins two days before. I recently moved in haven't unpacked everything yet.

Next up is to clear out the floor drain which is plugged somehow, fix the drywall and trim, and then continue with the larger tank build. Also going to get some water leak detectors. I have a 40g breeder and 20 long setup in the garage that are waiting to be setup in the "new" room.

Thanks
 
I had a motorcycle that made 138db full roar. It could make you deaf for a few hours. Serious pain, and looking back, quite obnoxious.

So a 120db would easily wake you up, and any neighbors.

But it is one helluva way to get a handle on the problem before it gets outta control.

And good on you for sticking with it! I don't even know you, but I'm proud of you.

If the oceans are in fact losing salinity and changing, the corals we keep won't be around much longer and we are the only thing keeping their species alive.

At least that's the speech that convinced my wife ;)
 
Well all I'll be able to contribute is euphyllia. I only keep corals in that genus.
Also I used to go live shows and also played in a band 20 years ago without hearing protection. Learned that lesson as a dumb teen since I have permanent hearing damage. Now I'm very careful with loud noises.
 
Well all I'll be able to contribute is euphyllia. I only keep corals in that genus.
Also I used to go live shows and also played in a band 20 years ago without hearing protection. Learned that lesson as a dumb teen since I have permanent hearing damage. Now I'm very careful with loud noises.
Was a booking agent, and performer. I know exactly what you mean
 
Twice now I have forgot to shut off my rodi before going to bed, both times woke up to about 1.5" of water in the basement.

First time I was devistated, second time, I was much more calm, and got it cleaned up much faster..

I know it sucks, but it's happened to a lot of us.

Just be sure to let the emotional part pass before making any actions

I have only been in the hobby for a few months and this same thing has already happened to me.
 
That really sucks man. But there is a silver lining to every cloud...could be the perfect excuse to give the wife for a brand new setup! ;)
 
my rodi unit is under my kitchen sink with a separate faucet on the sink. i store about 30g in a trash can in the back room. i'm an old single woman, i live in a mobile home so space is limited plus i live where no man has gone before (very isolated) and getting a plumber out here takes an act of God.

when i'm making rodi water, i run a piece of tubing from the faucet into a small plastic trash can. i have those "moving men" furniture movers that make stuff glide over carpet. i set a timer. when i have almost filled the plastic trash can, i just push into the back room, dump it into the 30g container, rinse and repeat till i have it full. it's a pita to do it that way but i don't have to do it often so it's no big deal for me.

BTW - are you related to Johnike??????????

billdog FTW!!

Was a booking agent, and performer. I know exactly what you mean

so do i! went to a ted nugent concert when i was young and dumb.
 
Wherever you have a potential for flood, get a water alarm of about 200 decibels. That would have waked you the instant water touched the alarm unit. A good one is under 20.00 ---check the decibel level: soft is no good. You want it to scream. And check its batteries once every 3 months, when you check the house smoke alarms.
+1 Some of the newer ones will even send a text to your cellphone. This is great if you happened to be away from home.

Full disclosure: I learn the hard way. I flooded my house 3 times. God bless my wife's patience.

Rule #1: no running water unless I am home and awake.
Rule #2: at least 1 water alarm on the floor anywhere there is water. This means if you have a basement sump then you have at least one in the basement and a second one underneath your display tank on the main floor.

Other tricks I learned to avoid disaster:
1. install a floor drain in your basement. It will cost a grand or two, but any floods get taken care of. Avoid one flood and its paid for itself. I did this after my third flood.
2. install a float sensor in your tank that is connected to your return pump. Eventually, inevitably, your tank drains will become clogged and if you don't catch it, your return pump keeps filling the tank, overflowing onto the floor. When the float sensor trips, it turns off the return pump.
3. Use a herbie or bean animal. Trust me, I'm an engineer. Please overdesign your system for safety. That extra drain line (or two) will save you someday.
4. Put redundant float switches in your sump for any auto-topoff system. Never rely on a single point of failure to keep your system working.
5. Put a water sensor on the floor that is connected upstream of your RO/DI. When it detects water it trips a solenoid that kills the water feed to your RO/DI.
6. See rule #1 above. I take the RO/DI filter wrench and put it on my pillow whenever I am filling anything. This reminds me not to go to sleep until I've turned off the RO/DI.





Aside: for the love of God, please replace your washer hoses every five years, and buy the metal braided hoses. It's an extra $20, but it is so worth it. I used to work for the world's largest appliance manufacturer in their laundry division. Every year we'd get sued by a few people whose washer hose broke and flooded their house. One guy was on vacation and came home to water lapping against the top step of his basement steps, no lie.
 
Lol, so I totally just flooded my basement again last night for the 4th?? Time.

Getting pretty good at this clean up procedure, use all the towels in the house, and every fan.
 
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