Humu Humu
lost in the pelagic zone
I have to share this incident which occurred last evening. I have a 125 Oceanic tank with twin internal overflows. They have two holes drilled at the bottom, where you put your bulkheads and run a standpipe, with a Durso to the operating level in the overflow. Very common setup.
Yesterday, I was fiddling around in the overflow, pulling out some algae that had accumulated at the surface and around the Durso. No big deal, I've done this hundreds of times. We then went out to dinner.
When we returned, the place had the most horrific stink! It smelled like something died in the apartment. We surmised that the odor was coming from the tank. I was confused, as the tank has no foul odor whatsoever. Looking under the tank I noticed that there was a slight drip beneath one of the bulkheads. I must have jostled the standpipe a bit too much when I was removing the algae a few hours ago. Still, no explanation for the rancid smell. I put a bucket under the drip and resolved to fix it the next day.
Today, being that day, I looked beneath the bulkhead and noticed the lock ring was loose, therefore allowing the slight drip. I tightened up the lock ring and the drip stopped. Again, no big deal, done this a few times as well. The smell immediately went away.
This got me thinking....The drip was coming from water that sits at the bottom of the overflow, deep down, where it gets little to no circulation, not like the surface of the overflow, where water movement is evident. Who knows whats at the base of these overflows? My tank is over one year old. Apparently, enough has settled in the overflow to become rancid at the bottom with anaerobic conditions present. The problem, is there is really no good way to clean this out, short of stuffing a siphon hose in there and trying to siphon any gunk that may have accumulated.
My next tank will have an external coast to coast, or something similar, shallow enough to allow me to keep it clean. I consider this a design flaw in the internal overflows.
Yesterday, I was fiddling around in the overflow, pulling out some algae that had accumulated at the surface and around the Durso. No big deal, I've done this hundreds of times. We then went out to dinner.
When we returned, the place had the most horrific stink! It smelled like something died in the apartment. We surmised that the odor was coming from the tank. I was confused, as the tank has no foul odor whatsoever. Looking under the tank I noticed that there was a slight drip beneath one of the bulkheads. I must have jostled the standpipe a bit too much when I was removing the algae a few hours ago. Still, no explanation for the rancid smell. I put a bucket under the drip and resolved to fix it the next day.
Today, being that day, I looked beneath the bulkhead and noticed the lock ring was loose, therefore allowing the slight drip. I tightened up the lock ring and the drip stopped. Again, no big deal, done this a few times as well. The smell immediately went away.
This got me thinking....The drip was coming from water that sits at the bottom of the overflow, deep down, where it gets little to no circulation, not like the surface of the overflow, where water movement is evident. Who knows whats at the base of these overflows? My tank is over one year old. Apparently, enough has settled in the overflow to become rancid at the bottom with anaerobic conditions present. The problem, is there is really no good way to clean this out, short of stuffing a siphon hose in there and trying to siphon any gunk that may have accumulated.
My next tank will have an external coast to coast, or something similar, shallow enough to allow me to keep it clean. I consider this a design flaw in the internal overflows.