How safe are HOB overflows?

dwculp

New member
I have a 100 gallon (60" long)FOWLR tank. I had always thought about drilling it out for overflows but at this point, I know that will never happen. I would need to drain the tank, put the rock and livestock somewhere etc...

Currently for filtration I use a large canister filter, that actually works well but I would like to use a sump so I can hide some of the equipment in it (heater, ATO, put in a protein skimmer etc).

How safe are HOB overflows? Any recomendations?
 
C-siphon by cpr has worked well for me. Far more reliable than the u-tube ones, never break siphon. Just keep an extra aqualifter pump on hand
 
I have been using an eshopps for about a year with no issues. Every time I unplug the pump and plug it back in it never loses siphon. Lifereef is great but the price is way too expensive compared to eshopps
 
I prefer the u tube style overflows cause they don't depend on a pump to work. I've had eshopps running for 18 months w/o losing suction.
 
I prefer the u tube style overflows cause they don't depend on a pump to work. I've had eshopps running for 18 months w/o losing suction.

X2, I've used U-tube style overflows off and on over the past 5 years. Eshopps are cheap and work great, LifeReefs are higher quality and work on the same principle. As long as you have the proper flow going through your U-tube to keep air bubbles out, the overflow its self will not fail.
 
I had and eshopps utube style HOB that ran on my tank for 2+ years before I broke down my previous tank. Never broke siphon from the day I set it up.
 
Cpr worked for me with no problems but just make sure you have a spare aqualifter pump incase it quits working.
 
Go u-tube before a CPR. The cpr's are a great concept but unfortunately when algae starts building up inside the box it slows flow down and it's super hard to clean out. Plus like previously stated they depend on a pump to keep a constant siphon. I have used u tubes many of times on older tanks (my current tank is drilled now so no need) and they always hold a siphon; never had a single issue. Word of experience one of my buddies is a fellow reefer and he likes the concept of a cpr box so he purchased his second one (he had one on an old tank but broke that tank down years ago). He had the same issue he had before, algae builds up and slows the flow down and relies on a pump to keep it going. Just like last time he went back to a u tube box. We just moved his tank and he want back to the old fashioned u tube.
 
Never used a CPR, what makes them superior?

The aqua lifter pump hooked up to it basically. It works without the pump but the pump gives it some redundancy. The u-tube siphons need to be re-primed if they sit for awhile with no flow ( an hour or so) and the cpr with the aqua lifter is self priming.
 
When I had my 40B, I used a lifereef HOB overflow box and it was great. It never lost the syphon ability even when the power went out for hours at a time. I never tried the CPR so I can't comment on that.
 
The CPR weir is the very epitome of a flawed design. Any product that requires another product to ensure safe operation is a poorly designed product.Over the years more floods have been attributed to a CPR than any other brand out there. The Aqualifter is another weak point, they work good in the beginning but it is a matter of time before it looses suction, the line clogs with algae or completely fails requiring a rebuild. Where will you be when it fails? If at home no biggie, but if you are away from the tank it can be an issue.

The U-tube design does not rely on any band aid to correct the poor engineering. Properly set up it will not lose suction, the tube will not lose water and any bubbles that appear will flow through it. It can be problematic if not set up correctly or too weak of a return pump is used, but these are not design flaws, they are user error.

I used hang on back overflows for many years, I never had a failure that wasn't because I did something stupid. I researched all of the different hang on overflows before I decided on the U-tube design. The number of failures of the CPR/Aqualifter design used to be fairly well known, you will find a lot of them in the archives here.
 
I have both the CPR with the lift pump and the U tube style. I honestly like and trust the U tube siphon over the CPR lift pump style. I think the main reason is I had trouble with the CPRs lift pump, on more than one occasion and water on the floor more than once with it. The lift pump would either stop working and I had to take it apart and mess with the magnets inside it, or I would find water inside the lift pump. It honestly only worked for me flawlessly for a little over a year before I had to replace the lift pump, plus those things get pretty warm running all the time. The U tube design is free, no power usage and no heat.

My U tube style I have never had a issue with. Yea I have to clean the tubes every so often, and manually start the siphon with a air line but that takes less than 4 minutes to do. I have never had a siphon break, or any flooding with the U tube styles. Then again I run all PVC returns and have a siphon break in the return so the siphon stops once the water level in the tank drops. But he u tubes always hold water like they are supposed to.
 
^^+3

I have had the Eshopps U tube overflow on my tank for going on 4 1/2 years without any problems I didn't cause myself. I've had the power go out at night and the siphon started right up as soon as the power came back on. The only maintenance is I soak the tube in vinegar every once in a while to clear it of algae and other sludge that builds up. I've had it hold the siphon even with a significant bubble at the top of the U tube.
 
The aqua lifter pump hooked up to it basically. It works without the pump but the pump gives it some redundancy. The u-tube siphons need to be re-primed if they sit for awhile with no flow ( an hour or so) and the cpr with the aqua lifter is self priming.

No they don't. I had a life reef and it sat with no flow overnight, didn't lose siphon.

The CPR/RO hob design is a horrible idea.
 
No they don't. I had a life reef and it sat with no flow overnight, didn't lose siphon.

The CPR/RO hob design is a horrible idea.

If it's so horrible then why did mine and plenty other peoples work flawlessly for years without a single problem? I've never used life reef but the eshopps overflow loses siphon.
 
Back
Top