A pair of EcoWheel tanks in the making

And last but not least, here are things down at the other end. I have just begun playing with the layout and will be working on things in the upcoming months.

Obviously, the inhabitants of this tank are going to need a little more than the normal TLC so I plan on taking things just a little slower than the pace I have currently kept.

Right now I'm thinking of a rock pinnacle that reaches from the sandbed to the surface. Kind of a deep rock wall with filter feeding corals growing outward into the currents.
 
I guess that's about all for now.

In a day or two I'll be adding updates with the status of things over the last couple weeks.

Until then...... Happy reefing :)

Brett
 
beautiful, Brett.

and all powered by a single airpump. that's amazing. i'm bookmarking this thread for future reference when i set up a new algaefilter tank in the coming years.
 
I like the concept of the Eco-Wheel, but the sticker shock is enough to give one a heart attack!
 
MarkS, I do get the idea we are still paying for the R&D on this system. However once you consider this is a complete system and you add up the price of a first rate system with skimmer, top end pumps, refugium, etc. the cost seems a little more reasonable. There are still plenty of add on toys though, such as top off system, calcium reator, etc. etc.:D
 
the elegance of the design is also something to consider. looking under Brett's stand and not seeing a jumble of boxes, salt-encrusted hoses and wires is worth something IMO.
 
picture the reef said:
MarkS, I do get the idea we are still paying for the R&D on this system. However once you consider this is a complete system and you add up the price of a first rate system with skimmer, top end pumps, refugium, etc. the cost seems a little more reasonable. There are still plenty of add on toys though, such as top off system, calcium reator, etc. etc.:D

I agree completely! It is a proven system that combines all of the filtration and water movement devices currently used on reef tanks into one compact unit. I just know that after working with acrylic and PVC plate that the price of the unit itself is about 100x higher than the price of the parts and labor. That's assuming that they are not buying the parts in bulk, which I am sure they are.

I have to admit that I have yet to see a terrible tank running an Eco-Wheel and that says something. It's just not for everyone.
 
Expect to give 3K for just the Eco-Wheel. I went with custom Oceanic tank with Starfire glass. Take a look at my current tank section. Get ready to open the wallet.:D
 
Wowza. Thats a bit of coin. But, when you consider not having to buy all sorts of other pumps and protein skimmers I bet it really is about as cheap, if not cheaper.
 
This is what I'm talking about! :eek:

First of all, I just heard about this whole EcoWheel thing a few days ago--I love it! I need to look into it more, but I'm loving how an ATS has finally been incorporated into such a smooth little operation.

All that aside, Putawaywet you have no idea how close your setup is to my dream system! You all can take your 500 gal tanks (they all look the same anyway), but I've had the dual coral head/deep-water system in my head for a while now (complete with some sort of psuedo cryptic zone and everything!). I just never thought of combining the two into one complete system. Everything just looks great in there. As for the deep-water side, if you can get the flow right, it will absolutely rock. I would suggest piling the rock clear up out of the water if you can, to help make it appear as if the structure continues right on up out of the field of view. Throw a pair of Fathead/Sunburst anthias in there for me!

Man..this is great. I'm going to have to live vicariously through you for a while, so keep the updates coming!
 
Last edited:
Can you include a few pics of the influent boxes showing how the water enters the 2 tanks? Does it create a surge effect with the acrylic guard lowered?
Thanks
 
Hi everyone,

I'm glad there seems to be some interest and hopefully you were able to follow along without too much trouble.

Also, thanks for the kind words it really makes all the effort worth it.

Here's a couple pics of the water coming out of the influent boxes.

The surge is not exactly dependent on the sliding gate being all the way down - it will suge regardless of it's position.

The way it is supposed to work is the gate is adusted so the normal flow comes in under, and the surge flows over.

If you slide the gate up.... the flow comes out more horizontal. If you adjust it down, the flow is more like a waterfall with everything going over the top.

However, that's easier said than done on my system as I have 3 influent boxes between the 2 tanks. As soon as you adjust one, if affects the other two. And then there is the evaporation issue..... after a day or two of evap the water level changes just enough to screw up your gate adjustments.

So, I just adjusted them by watching my gorgs in the tank. When they were really moving and dancing I figured that was as close as it needed to be.

Brett
 
Here's the right side. Ignore the brown blob in the middle, it's a snail that decided it liked what was growing on the acrylic.

I'll try to get another update posted later this evening.

Brett
 
Brett,

The reason you got 50+ joints sealed without a drip is that you, obviously, know what you are doing. One day, when I'm all growed up, I'd like to have a tank as neatly layed out, equipment-wise, as yours. Even better to see your now that it has a reef in it.

I'm so glad that the ring injector worked out in your application. It is hard to know how it might turn out, as far as output, since there are so many nuances in the system parameters that can effect it. By the pictures I'd say that you achieved excellent results, and without pulling enough micro bubbles back into the display tank as to be a distraction for the easily-distractable. That is a "problem" with mine when I really push it wide open.

One thing I expected in my air-lift system was a lot of cryptic-type creatures, especially sponges, along the collection tank (the equivalent of the lower part of your Eco Wheel tank) walls and maybe even in the piping. After 10 months with the air lift it hasn't happened. I haven't read Tyree's zonal filtration books, and maybe I'm missing how this is suppose to work. Maybe I need to buy and add some high-flow sponges and tunicates from DE to seed the system and then see what happens. What I do get that is unusual (compared to many tanks) is a wall of feather dusters (hundreds of them) near the 2' long inlet strainer inside the tank. I've harvested them back recently to keep the inlet from getting overgrown to the point of resticting water flow. But my water still yellows without carbon and I have no reason to believe that I'm supporting filter-feeders better than any other reasonably successful reef keeper not using an air lift.

I hope you'll update this thread periodically over the next couple of years. Once again, best of luck (As if you need it!).
 
Piercho, I'm not sure of how "high flow" the area is you're referring to, but I think featherdusters and similar organisms are what Tyree is referring to in the high flow cryptic zone. The sponges and tunicates need an almost still column of water to really acquire enough nutrients to grow and spread.
 
Back
Top