divebri69
New member
Hello all.
I have a 135gal mixed reef tank, not drilled, with overflow box and sump.
I made the current sump from an Amiracle wet/dry trickle filter. The sump won't hold the total overflow when I shut my pump down.
I'm preparing to build a new one. I just found a sheet of 1/4" black acrylic over in Brooklyn that a production company was getting rid of. Once I pick up a 16" x 48" piece of clear 1/4", I'll have my acrylic and start working.
The tank is in place and full, so I cannot build as large a sump as I would if I was just setting up new. I'll make a sump 30"l x 16"w x 16"h.
My intention is a simple straight line flow from left to right- intake/ skimmer - refugium - return.
I've been reading a bit about silencing fish tanks. One of the ideas I'm intrigued by is that by dropping my siphon lines into the sump so they are submerged I will have a marked reduction in noise.
I'm curious to know if anyone has tried this with success.
I am also going back and forth with the notion of particulate filtration with a 'sock' or just sticking with the old faithful pads I've always used. I do use foam prefilters for large particulates in the overflow box. I'm wondering what some of your experiences are with the filter socks.
I'm currently using a Coralife HOB skimmer, which has worked fine for me up until now. However, I had the opportunity to get an older ETSS 500 skimmer in my price range (dirt cheap) and I intend to set that up inside the sump. The skimmer currently has the gate valve attached perpendicular to the skimmer body. I've seen pics of the AE Tech Reef Devil models with the valve plumbed with an elbow to vent vertically upwards (parallel with the body) and am considering taking the bulkhead fitting apart to re-plumb in that style to save a bit of space in the sump. Anyone ever done that? I just shot off an email to AE Tech to ask if it's do-able or will mess up the skimmer performance, just wondering if anyone already has experience with that....
I'd be very happy to hear from anyone who's built sumps on their own and learned any basic design lessons I should heed!
Thanks for any input,
Brian
I have a 135gal mixed reef tank, not drilled, with overflow box and sump.
I made the current sump from an Amiracle wet/dry trickle filter. The sump won't hold the total overflow when I shut my pump down.
I'm preparing to build a new one. I just found a sheet of 1/4" black acrylic over in Brooklyn that a production company was getting rid of. Once I pick up a 16" x 48" piece of clear 1/4", I'll have my acrylic and start working.
The tank is in place and full, so I cannot build as large a sump as I would if I was just setting up new. I'll make a sump 30"l x 16"w x 16"h.
My intention is a simple straight line flow from left to right- intake/ skimmer - refugium - return.
I've been reading a bit about silencing fish tanks. One of the ideas I'm intrigued by is that by dropping my siphon lines into the sump so they are submerged I will have a marked reduction in noise.
I'm curious to know if anyone has tried this with success.
I am also going back and forth with the notion of particulate filtration with a 'sock' or just sticking with the old faithful pads I've always used. I do use foam prefilters for large particulates in the overflow box. I'm wondering what some of your experiences are with the filter socks.
I'm currently using a Coralife HOB skimmer, which has worked fine for me up until now. However, I had the opportunity to get an older ETSS 500 skimmer in my price range (dirt cheap) and I intend to set that up inside the sump. The skimmer currently has the gate valve attached perpendicular to the skimmer body. I've seen pics of the AE Tech Reef Devil models with the valve plumbed with an elbow to vent vertically upwards (parallel with the body) and am considering taking the bulkhead fitting apart to re-plumb in that style to save a bit of space in the sump. Anyone ever done that? I just shot off an email to AE Tech to ask if it's do-able or will mess up the skimmer performance, just wondering if anyone already has experience with that....
I'd be very happy to hear from anyone who's built sumps on their own and learned any basic design lessons I should heed!
Thanks for any input,
Brian