Cylinder Sump

Tradewinds

Well-known member
Would it be practical to build a cylinder sump? I was hoping to design a way to efficently flush out ditritus during water changes. What would the disadvantagles be to such a design? I would place the sump in a fish room rather than under the tank.

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I suspect that in this case practical is more a matter of whether you have a place where you can put it (as drawn it'd be quite tall) and could afford to actually build/buy it.

Looks like it would work though, in terms of providing easy flushing of detritus.
 
I don't see dimensions on it, so assumed it would be sized appropriately for the tank (thus the comment about the cost - circular cast acrylic tanks are very expensive). It is obviously large enough for a skimmer, return pump, refugium, and an area below these things as well as the cone. These are all shown in the drawing.

Only the OP knows though. :)
 
they sell cone-bottomed, plastic stock tanks of varying sizes at local agricultural supply store along with steel stands to hold the cone tanks upright... not too big, IMO...

if I had to guess, starting at 40 gal under $100...
 
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Look up settling tanks. I plan doing setting a 30 gallon one up this summer. Hoping it makes it easier to remove waste.
 
Thats a great idea. I would go for it. No more syphoning sump. And waterchanges would be a breeze.. I like it.

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they sell cone-bottomed, plastic stock tanks of varying sizes at local agricultural supply store along with steel stands to hold the cone tanks upright... not too big, IMO...

if I had to guess, starting at 40 gal under $100...

+1

I would size the sump to fit the needs of the tank. I am thinking about playing around with this design for a 40 breeder.

I guess it is just as easy to use a shop vac on a rectangle sump, but something about the cylinder intrigues me.
 
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