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I was looking for a small frig since I saw the pick that Mike (Uhuru) posted up of Steve's Weast's autofeeding system. Steve's design had me sleepless after seeing it. One issue that I had was I needed to find something that have WAF (wife acceptance factor) since my aquarium is in my dining room. With a little compromise and searching, I found the refrigerator above. It looks to be large enough to fit atleast 2 dosing pumps inside. There should not be an issue drilling the sides for the water line to pass through. So this the first part in the design of "Weast-O-Matic" (sorry Steve).
Mike
Thanks for the tip.
The plan was to run a 1/2" line through the frig, this was going to sealed the 2 pass through points. Now, when I build it I will take this into consideration.
With your dosing pumps, were they located inside or outside of the refrigerator? I can see an issue of vacuum being created if the dosing pump was on the outside.
I am putting together my order list of John Guest fittings and pvc parts needed for the project. Just looking for one more part and then I will place the order.
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I was looking for a small frig since I saw the pick that Mike (Uhuru) posted up of Steve's Weast's autofeeding system. Steve's design had me sleepless after seeing it. One issue that I had was I needed to find something that have WAF (wife acceptance factor) since my aquarium is in my dining room. With a little compromise and searching, I found the refrigerator above. It looks to be large enough to fit atleast 2 dosing pumps inside. There should not be an issue drilling the sides for the water line to pass through. So this the first part in the design of "Weast-O-Matic" (sorry Steve).
Mike
It is on the outside but it should not matter. If you are removing matter from the inside and it is sealed you will develop a vacuum. It will reduce the amount of food being pumped. Besides that the air pump stired the food as it was being pumped.
Oh watch out. Most TEC mini fridges I have tested are fine for wine and such that like to be above 50f but very few actually held below 50f in a room that was 70-80f.
Many of the ones built for wine will not get below 50f period as wine(white) IIRC wants to be at around 50-57f.
Ran into a snag with the refrigerator. It is going to be back ordered to atleast the 28th of May. Might need to look into alternatives if this becomes an issue.
For now I am going to work on the dosing part of the system. I decided on going with the Bubble Magus BM-T01, it is a 3 unit dosing pump system. It can also control an additional 4 unit slave dosing pump. The unit was well priced and has been fairly accurate according to reefers that have been using the system.
With the system's design I am taking a few things into consideration. First, I need to make sure it is covering everything I would like to dose and keep within a reasonable budget. If we want for non-photosynthetic niche of the hobby to grow we have to keep it within the budget of the average reefer. Now I know, maybe putting a $300+ doser in a plumbed refrigerator might be a little out of the means of a few. Put this into consideration, how much it would cost to set up a basic calcium reactor in a SPS aquarium? Mike (Uhuru) is onto something with his thread. If a basic, proven system is created for reefers to set-up to autofeeding system for their non-photosynthetic aquariums, I truly believe more would venture into our realm. Hell, I saw on the DIY section that reefers that are not even keeping non-photosynthetic aquariums are interested. Well, I guess after anyone saw that piece of eye candy that Steve created why wouldn't you want to make one.
So the project moves on...
Mike
Ran into a snag with the refrigerator. It is going to be back ordered to atleast the 28th of May. Might need to look into alternatives if this becomes an issue.
For now I am going to work on the dosing part of the system. I decided on going with the Bubble Magus BM-T01, it is a 3 unit dosing pump system. It can also control an additional 4 unit slave dosing pump. The unit was well priced and has been fairly accurate according to reefers that have been using the system.
With the system's design I am taking a few things into consideration. First, I need to make sure it is covering everything I would like to dose and keep within a reasonable budget. If we want for non-photosynthetic niche of the hobby to grow we have to keep it within the budget of the average reefer. Now I know, maybe putting a $300+ doser in a plumbed refrigerator might be a little out of the means of a few. Put this into consideration, how much it would cost to set up a basic calcium reactor in a SPS aquarium? Mike (Uhuru) is onto something with his thread. If a basic, proven system is created for reefers to set-up to autofeeding system for their non-photosynthetic aquariums, I truly believe more would venture into our realm. Hell, I saw on the DIY section that reefers that are not even keeping non-photosynthetic aquariums are interested. Well, I guess after anyone saw that piece of eye candy that Steve created why wouldn't you want to make one.
So the project moves on...
Mike
This project is to create a simple refrigerated, multi- liquid dosing system that can be easily replicated. This system would help with the liquid dosing of food through out the day.
I am quite aware that this method in not new or revolutionary. Now this practice may not have been "popular" in the past but neither was the keeping of non-photosynthetic corals.
As more reefers look to keeping non-photosynthetic corals they will need to have the proper tools for doing so.
Most people in general want to feel "safe" and "secure" before they take the risk of doing something. Whether it is in life or even their first post on a forum. It is part of human nature.
Feeding methods and husbandry practices need to be clear for our community. They also need to be proven that they work, no smoke and mirrors.
This project is a learning expierience for myself too. Currently liquid dosing of foods are consistantly fed in the a.m. and through the evening but not during the day for 9 hrs/6 hrs at night. During that time, as with the rest of the day, the aquarium is dry fed 24/7. I want to reduce the lapse in time of liquid feeding and have more consistancy of the dosing intervals when I am away for work or vacation. In addition with doing this, I also want to see the effects on the aquarium, see what is actually needed with feeding and what isn't.
Mike
Mike, the problem that I have, and it is a computer issue, is the computer runs in increments of 1 minute. So I have to water down the "mix". Then I can't keep enough to feed to feed more than 48 hours. I am not gone very much, so it is fine for me, but if you intend to be gone for more than that you will need a pumping system that can be ran in seconds. I think more often with less food would be better.
I am feeding 8 times in a 24 hour period. Plus, I manually feed other times that I am around. I would rather feed half as much 16 times. So, if your starting from scratch I would look for a dosing system that ran on seconds instead of minutes. Can't wait to see your project!