Joining the club... my new 240G build :)

The Dead Sea

Incremental progress is being made! The dead material is all in the tank now - the sand and rocks are set up how I want them to be, and it's actually starting to look like an aquarium, rather than a glass box...

You can see that I changed the angle of the stand supporting the large flat plate in the middle of the tank. I thought it was too beautiful a piece of rock to be mostly-hidden by nature of being too high up and horizontal. The slight inclination to the front shows off the piece much better, and I'll still be able to attach corals etc. to it later on...

Maybe it's just me, but the rock structure on the right looks like a duck, with possible a duckling (or pigeon) sitting just below and to the left of it. Perhaps I'm just bird-brained! Having said that, the one on the left looks a bit like a Scottie dog, so maybe the rocks are just like clouds - you see whatever your brain tries to fit to match the abstract shapes...

dead-sea.png

The next step is to finish off the plumbing at the top of the tank (the lower plumbing is all done now) and start to add water! Before the water can be added, though, I need to get the LitreMeter working so it can pump the NSW from the storage tanks, so 3 more tasks and the dead sea will be ready to start cycling.

Once the water is in place, the plan is to get some live sand and live rock from liverocknreef. The experiences forum seem to be mostly good (one bad story) for these guys, so hopefully that'll all go well. I'm not going to be getting *too* much more rock / sand. I kind of like the open space in the aquarium...

Simon
 
Lighting, the way

So much of this is just thinking ahead, trying to make sure it's not like being in the army ... hurry up, and wait ... hurry up, and wait ... ad nauseum.

The lighting set up is going to be DIY LEDs. This is for a couple of reasons:

  • Cost is important - the less money I spend on lighting, the more I can spend on corals... oh, and the baby due in February [grin]
  • Control is important too. The way I'm planning to ultimately set it up is a little more expressive than most. To start off with it'll be more basic, but I intend to enhance it over time

The plan is to use a whole bunch of 3W LEDs from CREE - the Bridgelux LEDs are cheaper, but they're not rated as having the higher current-load capacity as the CREE ones, so they're out. There's not sufficient price difference between CREE and any of the other major vendors to warrant me going with anyone other than the market leader, so the rest are out, too.

I'm not ready to spill the beans on the controller I'll be using just yet - keeping that one up my metaphorical sleeve, but the driver circuit is below:

led-pod-board.png

The board is way larger than it could be, but that's because I'm using the copper on the board as a heatsink for the CAT4101 chips (the 7 large chips on the right-ish side). In my experiments, 1" of double-sided 1oz-copper is sufficient to keep the CAT4101's only warm to the touch. This board actually almost doubles that figure, so the CAT4101's ought to be ok. It's a bit more expensive to build the board in the first place, but that'll pay off with lower failure risk in the long run.

The left side are the outputs that drive the LEDs. There are 7 4101's, so there are 7 +/- connectors for the LEDs to be attached to. On the left are the inputs to the board. In this case I've incorporated a few debugging features (there is a 9-way serial port and several LEDs), as well as the ethernet and power connectors. Ethernet ? Yup, the board runs as a webserver, and the lights can be controlled interactively from there.

All very well, but what's it actually driving - well I've not built it yet, but here's a model of the lighting-pods I'll be making:

led-pod.png

This is all T-slot Aluminium extrusion, so it's easy to bolt together and it's very strong. My thinking at the moment is to anodise the extrusion (either at home or get someone to do it) to a black colour, and to not run a canopy - the lights will be the only thing above the tank, which has a very neat black rim around it - it's almost like a rimless tank. There will be 4 of these pods over the 8' tank, with each pod being 23" wide. The extension at the rear of the module is to both attach to the automatic raise/lower mechanism, and as a support basis for the PSU and LED driver board.

You can see there are 7 rows of LEDs, each of which correspond to one driver circuit. That gives me a lot of lengthwise-along-the-tank control of the lighting intensity, since each driver circuit has PWM (pulse wave modulation) ability, and can therefore dim the LEDs along that row. The intention is to have a lengthwise sunrise/sunset ability, ramping the LEDs up or down in brightness to simulate the suns progress across the sky.

The resolution isn't quite as high as it looks because the LEDs are in groups of 6, but each group will be homogenous - so the pattern will look more like:

led-array.png

... where the darker blues are 'royal blue', the whites are neutral white or warm white, and the center row is an ordinary 'blue' LED. Thus, the resolution is effectively halved because the blues and whites combine to form the "colour temperature" of the tank, so will two-rows-at-a-time.

I'm going to be using the BJB LED connectors...
bjb.png
to attach the LEDs because it makes replacement easier in future, and LEDs are constantly getting better and better. If any of them fail, it also makes it easier to swap them out.

Speaking of LED failure, this setup (like most) wires a set of LEDs together in a circuit - in my case 6 LEDs are driven by a single driver. If a single LED fails in closed-circuit mode, ie: the path through the LED becomes very low resistance, all that really happens is that the CAT4101 has to sink a lot more power for that single 6-LED circuit, which it does by heating up. The large copper heatsinking area ought to help out here. The (still rare, but far more likely) failure is an open circuit failure, where the LED "blows" and there is no circuit path left. In this case, all 6 LEDs would normally shut down, and you have to (a) figure out which LED has blown, then (b) replace it before any of the LEDs in that circuit will operate again. This is usually a stressful experience...

Enter the PLED. These little devices are designed to act as a shunt if ever the LED fails. They are transparent to the circuit in normal use, but if the LED fails open-circuit, it provides a circuit path which allows the rest of the LEDs for that driver to continue to operate. This means only a single LED will go dark, and removes the "I must fix this now!" mentality - a single LED failing is neither here nor there. A whole strip failing has much more of an imperative psychological effect, and indeed (on larger strips-of-LEDs than mine) can even have a real negative effect on the lighting.

So, Every LED will get a little bypass circuit attached to it in the wiring harness. For the minimal extra cost, I think it's worth it. These weren't my idea, by the way, I got them from nuclearheli's build

So, that's the basic setup. It gives me quite a bit of flexibility, but it's not all the way there. Once I started thinking about the PLEDs and how they could be used, it seemed to me there was a lot of potential going to waste. Since a PLED can take over the duties of its associated LED, it effectively allows individual control of each LED. The idea is that once I have this protection per LED, I could also wire in a transistor along with it, and allow programmatic bypass of individual LEDs, with the PLED carrying the burden

At first, I was thinking that the 'on' LEDs would be limited to the same PWM level within the same string, but actually that's not the case. If the circuit is laid out as
  • {A} master ATMega88 PWM controller for 7 strings, connected via I2C to
  • {B} ATTiny per string, controlling the individual LEDs in that string, which
  • can switch on or off a transistor that simulates an open circuit on individual LEDs

Where B has the PWM from A as an input, it can modulate the (known) PWM signal via the shunt and remove pulses in the stream. Each LED would actually be individually controllable - only by removing pulses, but that's not a problem because the PWM rate is also under control. Just set the PWM frequency to be that needed for the brightest LED on the string, and the rest are necessarily at most as bright, if they're darker remove some PWM pulses... Bob's your auntie's live-in-lover...

With this in place I was thinking I could do things like simulating storms / cloud-cover with the sun breaking through in places; I could do spot-lighting of the areas within the tank that I wanted (eg: the three islands); I could move that lighting around programmatically. If you wanted to be silly, you could set the lighting to music like people do their houses at halloween - fun for, oh at least 5 minutes... There's more possibilities, is what I'm saying, even if I don't really condone the 'halloween' effect...

So that's the long-term plan. I'll be wiring things up so that this can be done, but the first iteration of the driver won't actually provide for the fine control, I'm on a time-limit here (did I mention the baby in February ?) so getting things sorted out, up, and running is more important than getting everything perfect first time.

For now, I have to check over the circuit for the driver a few dozen more times, then send it off to be made (which takes a couple of weeks), so that when the next task (water in the tank) is complete, I'll have the ability to start the lighting straight away... Planning, planning, planning...

Simon.
 
I continue to be impressed by the details, and the thought you've put into this. Thanks for sharing everything. I can't wait to see the water in it.

On your DI, what's your TDS look like before the RO? I run through DI resin about as quickly as you do, but my tap water's TDS is 500-600+, so I'm not too surprised. Not too happy, either, but not too surprised! :)
 
I continue to be impressed by the details, and the thought you've put into this. Thanks for sharing everything. I can't wait to see the water in it.

Thanks for the kind words - I can't wait for the water either [grin].

I got in touch with Spectrapure to confirm that filling the tank using the water-exchange system wouldn't cause the motor to overheat or anything - it'll be running solidly for ~15 days to fill the tank! They also confirmed that the 70' span between the storage tanks and the display tank shouldn't be a problem :)

On your DI, what's your TDS look like before the RO? I run through DI resin about as quickly as you do, but my tap water's TDS is 500-600+, so I'm not too surprised. Not too happy, either, but not too surprised! :)

Well, BRS got back to me (quite quickly, actually) and said the values were not unreasonable, if a little on the low side. They asked me to do some water tests (pH, Alkalinity, TDS) but I'm waiting for the test kits to be delivered... I had only bought the 'cycling' tests up until now (NO2, NO2, Ammonia) and was going to do pH via the (not yet set up) controller. So when they arrive I'll do the all the tests at the same time and we'll see.

Simon.
 
To fill, or not to fill, that is the question...

To fill, or not to fill, that is the question...

So the plumbing is all "done". That is to say, I've made all the connections and all the BeanAnimal standpipes appear to be at the correct heights. We'll see if it's truly "done" once water is rushing through it...

Which brings me to a question:

I was planning on filling up the tank using the LitreMeter pump, but it occurred to me that this will take some time (~2 weeks!). During all that time the dry rock will presumably be leaching the phosphates I didn't get out of it into the water, without any benefit from the GFO, because there's not enough water in the tank to run the sump, which is where the GFO is plumbed off the return pump...

So, is this a good idea ? I'm leaning towards ... 'not'. The other option is to quickly fill the tank, but this means going and buying 100' of 3/4" vinyl hose, so I can pump the water from the other end of the house into the tank. I can do that (mail order, HD only has 20' lengths), but I really wanted to fill the tank this weekend (d@mmit! [grin]).

Anyone fancy chiming in ?

Simon
 
What about connectors for each 20' piece of hose? what about a 32 gallon brute on a dolly that you can move with the water in it and then pump it into the tank?
 
What about connectors for each 20' piece of hose? what about a 32 gallon brute on a dolly that you can move with the water in it and then pump it into the tank?

Both good ideas. My local HD is out of barb/barb connectors... I guess I could try making some barb/slip/barb combos though. Perhaps I'll go tomorrow and see if they've got those in stock...

The tank-on-a-trolly (brute on a dolly sounds a bit iffy [grin]) is a bit difficult because there's a lawn in-between the storage tanks/display.

Cheers,

Simon
 
Yeah moving that across the lawn would not be easy. You might try garden shops that sell pond equipment or irrigation supplies.


You could get a bunch of guys, buckets and beer and have beer and bucket party!!! Once the buckets are empty of water they can fill them with beer.
Good luck!!!!

Steve
 
Well, after a visit to Lowes (not Home Depot, who were extortionately expensive), I got 100' of tubing and proceeded to start filling just the overflow on the left-side of the tank. The goal was to test out the plumbing before committing to filling the tank up. The water filled up the overflow, drained to the sump, and overflowed into the second chamber of the sump as it ought to. Then I could check the return by closing off various ball-valves underneath the tank, and redirecting the returned water into the overflow itself rather than the tank.

Glad I did that... The manifold with all the ball-valves "for future use" (a future that will now never come) had a dodgy connection right in the middle of it. As far as I can see, that makes the whole thing useless, and I'll have to replace. It looks as though I didn't put enough of the gray goo into the joint, and there's a small but persistent leak between a 'T' section and a 1.5" -> 1" reducing bushing that has got to be fixed. Since I didn't put any unions in-between the ball-valves (for space reasons), the whole thing has got to be re-done.

Still, I'm looking at this as a blessing in disguise. A very good disguise... Once the piping was in place, I couldn't actually reach down behind the sump to get to the bulkhead that feeds the pump. If I re-plan it slightly when I do it over, I ought to be able to still have access to that bulkhead without stripping everything down like I have to at the moment.

Oh well... I guess I'd rather find out now...

Simon
 
Fill 'er up

Well, the moment has finally arrived. It's been a hectic last few weeks (both at work and at home) so I haven't had too much time to play with the tank, but after re-doing some of the underneath plumbing, the tank and plumbing appear to be holding water :)

To test things out, I did as before, and short-circuited the plumbing so I didn't need to fill the tank, but once there were no leaks for a good hour or so of pumping, I could start to fill the tank up... Here's the start...

tank-fill-2.jpg

And here's the progress so far :)

tank-fill-3.jpg

Looks like it's finally starting :beer: It won't have filled up by the end of today, so I'll just let it sit and finish up tomorrow...

Simon.
 
The sound of Silence ?

So, now the tank is full of water, the Bean overflow is happily in place, and the only (tiny) leak actually drips into the sump anyway. I'll fix it, but it's not crucial right now.

The Warner Marine K2 skimmer is plugged in and switched on, it's actually producing far too many bubbles at the moment, even with the gate valve completely open (!). I've left it to overflow back into the sump, and I hope this is because the thing is squeaky clean and needs to bed in for a little while. It's a bit noisy, too. Hopefully that'll disappear as it starts to slime up a bit...

The overflow is silent, blessedly silent. The skimmer is a bit noisy, but the main noise is coming from the Reeflo Dart pump. There are a few reasons for noisy pumps given on the reeflo site, one of which is running them in for 48 hours. Well, we'll see :) It's not *hugely* noisy, but it is annoying...

Any insight on any of this greatly appreciated :)

Simon
 
The silence of the pumps ?

So yesterday I got in touch with Reeflo by email. About 4 minutes after sending the email I had a reply back from them. We discussed how I'd set up the pump, what the probable causes of the noise were, and eventually I sent them a sound recording of the pump running.

I mentioned that I could hear the pump from ~50' away unless I closed doors in-between the pump and where I was standing. It was a low continuous hum (90% of the sound) with a superimposed oscillation (about 10% of the sound) on top of it.

The next reply from them was that the bearings must have slipped during shipping, asking for my shipping address / serial number etc. and they'd replace the pump with a silent one. I understand that this is how it's supposed to work, but because it so often doesn't, I can't praise Reeflo enough for their approach to business. They have a convert for life.

Simon.
 
Ch,Ch,Ch,Chaaanges...

So, this weekend I hooked up the Litermeter III. The plan was to set it up to swap out 20 gallons of water per week, and top up with freshwater. It didn't quite turn out that way, and I suspect I've got the wrong pump (I bought an 'external pump' rather than a 'water-exchange unit'). I think I'll be able to do it though.

litermeter.jpg

In the snapshot, the blue line is the freshwater, the red line is the new salt water, and the black line is the drain. I made 'shelves' by stringing some 2x4's between the legs, and secured the units to the shelves using some industrial-strength velcro. Even though the peristaltic pumps vibrate (quietly :) ) they're not coming off that shelf.

The nice thing about the LM3 is that it calibrates the dosage lines for you, and it turns out that my waste-water line can dump about 260 ml/min, but my saltwater-in line can only source about 160 ml/min. I guess the additional overhead of pumping up as well as along the 70' line causes an extra head loss, and therefore a lower pump rate. Still, because it's calibrated, I just tell both pumps to process 11 liters per day, and they'll run however long they need to, to make sure the same amount of water comes in as goes out. All very satisfying :)

So, I have it doing the water changes, but I need the water-exchange unit to do the automatic top-off thing, so that the pump stops adding water once the sump water-level reaches a certain height. I have a query in with Spectrapure to see if they have any advice as to how I can do it with what I have, else I'll have to swap one of the external pump units for a water-exchange unit. At the moment, I'm just topping off manually...

Simon.
 
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Quick update regarding the Reeflo pump:

After talking with Reeflo on Tuesday (18/10) a box arrived on Friday night (21/10). It had a new pump inside, as well as a paid return-postage UPS label for my original pump. I replaced the pump on Saturday, and since then we've been enjoying a much lower volume of noise. You can still hear the pump (it's not totally silent) but the decibel level must have gone down by a factor of 5 or more. It's now possible to sit at the table (right next to the tank) and have a normal conversation, without shouting The low-level hum is quite relaxing, actually

Way to go, Reeflo. I'll be posting this in vendor experiences as well...

Simon.
 
Let there be ... life

We're finally starting to get there... Yesterday afternoon I ordered 25 lbs of cherry primo picked live rock from liverocknreef.com as a seed for the BRS rock already in the tank. This morning it arrived at the airport, so off to pick it up and here's what it looks like:



and a full tank shot



(You can click on the images to get better-resolution versions)

I was pretty darn pleased with the amount of "life" there was on the "live" rock - and 25 lbs just disappeared into the tank without sacrificing the sparse 'clean' look I'm going for.

Hopefully the new rock will help out in cycling the tank, but there's no hurry... I'm planning on getting lighting up and running over Thanksgiving, and the real target is to have it all working by Xmas, so I'm well on target :)

Simon.
 
Woo Hoo! A blurry mess!

So, off to the airport again for the live-sand, shipped straight from the seabed, since they didn't have any in stock last week. Monday gathering and shipment for a Tuesday delivery. Not bad.

Of course, adding the sand to a running tank was ... a mess, and the inevitable sandstorm makes a mockery of the crystal-clear water we could see before, so now it looks like:

blurry-mess.jpg
...
signs-of-life.jpg

.. and about 2 minutes after putting the sand in, I snapped this little snail, doing a fair old motor up the side of the front-glass. For a snail, he was really travelling...

... It's pretty amazing how much we get into this, when (after spying that first guy) I spent the next twenty minutes trying to see other things moving around :) I never did see anything else, and in fact when I went back to the front-glass the original guy had disappeared as well. Such is life :)

The sand is a different colour/texture to the original stuff I had in there (you can see the stark contrast along the front of the tank), but hopefully it'll all mix up and about over time; especially if I start adding sand-sifting critters.

Simon.
 
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