Drilled!

Rot26

New member
After much debate about the risks and benefits to drilling a tank and adding a sump vs using a HOB overflow, I decided to go for it.

I have a 72G bowfront which makes the stand oddly shaped. I could not fit a 20g long in it, just barely and I did not want to use a 20g tall, because I felt I'd lose too much volume to just air. I wanted to maximize refugium space and the tall tank just didn't have enough room for everything. I ended up going with 2 10g tanks. One is a dedicated refugium and the other is a sump.

I ordered 2 overflows from glass-holes, one large and one small. The plan was to have the main tank drain into both the refugium and the sump, then have the refugium drain into the sump, and the sump pump back into the main tank. Then, I read all about cascading on here and realized that was a horrible design.

Now, the main tank drains into the sump. The sump has a return pump to the main tank and a smaller pump to the refugium. The refugium drains back into the sump.

I was able to drill the refugium without issue, which gave me the courage to drill the main tank. I already had fish in it, but after drilling the 10, I had it rather figured out. I put duct tape on the inside and a board, then put the template on the outside and clamped it all together. I also put paper towels under the "hole" on the inside, so things wouldn't drip in.

Took about 45 minutes to slowly drill it out. I plumbed it all up for all 3 tanks, waited, then started the pumps. Everything is flowing well without leaks. I'll post pictures later.
 
The main tank has a 3000/2, so 1500, and the refugium is the Super Nano, which is up to 200. The return pump for the main tank is an Eheim 2000, which probably gets me 300-400 gph and the refugium has an Eheim 300, which is probably about 100 gph. Both pumps are clearly the limiting factors, but it would be easier to replace a pump than drill a bigger hole :D

The main tank has a pair of powerheads so that should have enough turnover. The refugium only gets water flow from the overflow and pump. We'll see if it's enough.
 
Rot26

You say there were fish in it?

What did you do drain halfway drill then refill

I am wanting to do this for my 55gal

Kent
 
I drained it to about 1/3 full. I needed to pull it away from the wall, so I removed the rocks that were close to the top, moved some coral down, and drained as much as possible to make it lighter.

Once it was drilled, I pushed it back, then added fresh water (we need a better term for "newly made salt water" than "fresh water", it's confusing).
 
What's the problem with main tank draining to fuge and fuge draining to sump and then return pumping back to main tank from sump?

That has been my plan...
 
I know a local shop who has employees drilling glass panels all the time for different reasons, and let me just say......if those dudes can do it, then my toddler could probably do it.

Just a matter of figuring out if it's tempered or not.
 
What's the problem with main tank draining to fuge and fuge draining to sump and then return pumping back to main tank from sump?

That has been my plan...

there is a couple things wrong with it"¦

1. your fuge is likely considerably smaller then your display"¦and doing this would mean you need to have two identical sized overflows one in the display and one in the fuge"¦the one in the fuge should likely be bigger in case it backs up from the flow"¦

2. there is no reason to have this much flow in your fuge to begin with"¦it is a slow calm place for pods to breed and cheato to grow"¦

3. you don't want all that polluted detritus filled water plugging up your fuge either"¦it will eventually settle out and create huge problems for you"¦

i am pretty sure the fluid dynamics of it doesn't work as well as you would like either"¦

the best way is to plumb a t into your return line and feed the fuge that way"¦then you don't need an extra pump either
 
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