SkyHawk
New member
The Fish Room
The Fish Room
The fish room was super fun to plan for. I have never had a fish room before but I did consult my notes from my last system as to the features I wanted this time around. For you guys that are debating the necessity of this room I will say if you can do it, do it. I love mine and now can’t imagine maintaining my system without it.
Requirements
1-Must be in basement. There just is not any space for a fish room on the main floor of our house.
2-Must house the pumps (all pumps make some sort of sound), I am running at least three 24/7. I want the main display as quiet as possible.
3-Must have a utility sink. I can’t even understand how I could maintain my tank without this now…
4-House a sump of at least 90 gallons. I want to add as much additional water volume to the system to improve water parameter stability and increase possible bioload.
5-Sump must drain directly to home drain. Not interested in carrying buckets and I have a bad back…
6-House a heated salt water reservoir with built in mixer.
7-House a RO/DI water reservoir that is plumbed to salt water reservoir, RO/DI filters and to auto top off.
8-Humidity stays within a reasonable range <50%
9-Two dedicated fish room only 120V circuits on 20 amp breakers. When everything is on at the same time (and it will happen) the system sucks a lot of juice. No sense heating up my wires and possibly tripping a circuit. Having two also gives you some redundancy should one trip.
10-Short plumbing runs. Not sure why this came in at #10 as this is quite important to me and had large influence on location of fish room and its content. Keep the plumbing as short and simple as possible as to maximize pump efficiency (directly related to electricity cost).
11-House a quarantine tank min 33 gal.
12-Tank maintenance does not involve carrying/lifting buckets.
Spoiler Alert: I was able to achieve all the above and more with the exception of #11. I just couldn't fit the quarantine tank in the room. I was unwilling to throw away my 10' shelves (seen in previous pictures, post #11) which I had just built last year. They are just way too handy. So the QT had to be put outside the fish room.
I also started curing my BRS Pukani dry rock in 2 Rubbermaid containers. This made me realize that the first thing I need is that utility sink.
The Fish Room
The fish room was super fun to plan for. I have never had a fish room before but I did consult my notes from my last system as to the features I wanted this time around. For you guys that are debating the necessity of this room I will say if you can do it, do it. I love mine and now can’t imagine maintaining my system without it.
Requirements
1-Must be in basement. There just is not any space for a fish room on the main floor of our house.
2-Must house the pumps (all pumps make some sort of sound), I am running at least three 24/7. I want the main display as quiet as possible.
3-Must have a utility sink. I can’t even understand how I could maintain my tank without this now…
4-House a sump of at least 90 gallons. I want to add as much additional water volume to the system to improve water parameter stability and increase possible bioload.
5-Sump must drain directly to home drain. Not interested in carrying buckets and I have a bad back…
6-House a heated salt water reservoir with built in mixer.
7-House a RO/DI water reservoir that is plumbed to salt water reservoir, RO/DI filters and to auto top off.
8-Humidity stays within a reasonable range <50%
9-Two dedicated fish room only 120V circuits on 20 amp breakers. When everything is on at the same time (and it will happen) the system sucks a lot of juice. No sense heating up my wires and possibly tripping a circuit. Having two also gives you some redundancy should one trip.
10-Short plumbing runs. Not sure why this came in at #10 as this is quite important to me and had large influence on location of fish room and its content. Keep the plumbing as short and simple as possible as to maximize pump efficiency (directly related to electricity cost).
11-House a quarantine tank min 33 gal.
12-Tank maintenance does not involve carrying/lifting buckets.
Spoiler Alert: I was able to achieve all the above and more with the exception of #11. I just couldn't fit the quarantine tank in the room. I was unwilling to throw away my 10' shelves (seen in previous pictures, post #11) which I had just built last year. They are just way too handy. So the QT had to be put outside the fish room.
I also started curing my BRS Pukani dry rock in 2 Rubbermaid containers. This made me realize that the first thing I need is that utility sink.