Large tank water changes

tran383

Member
Wondering how most folks do their water changes on such large tanks? I currently have a 120 that I pump water from the display tank out and than pump new water back into the display tank.

Most people have their tanks stocked all the way to the top so I doubt people are draining from their display tanks. My sump doesn't have enough water for me to replace since half of it's the refugium. Or with such large tanks people don't even do water changes! :fish1:
 
I pull 10 from the display and 15 from the sump. It is a 180 gallon display. 100 gallon sump with about 50-60 gallons of water in sump. New water is refilled in the sump only and pumped to the display tank.
 
No! I think most of us do water changes. I have a 100gal sump and a 100gal fuge. I change out about 50 gal every other week and drain/fill it from my sump. I also think most of these large tanks have large sumps as well.
 
I got a 180 and a 150 that are supported via a 150 sump. To do a water change, I open a ball valve off the return line and dump 50g from the sump. I then open another valve to pump in 50g from my mixing tank back into the sump. Whole operation takes maybe 5 minutes and the water levels in the displays never drop.
 
A good rule of thumb is to have a sump large enough to handle water changes suitable for your system. In a 120 I would say maybe 12 - 15 gallons a week would be ideal, which means you would have say a 40 breeder for a sump.

There was another thread the other day about draining water from the DT and a lot of people chimed in saying that they pull water from the DT and expose some coral to the air for 20 or 30 minutes at a time. There were pictures posted of natural reefs at low tide with the coral coming completely out of the water. So if you had to pull from the tank, I wouldn't worry to much about it.
 
I have a vacume the sand in my tank which removes about 30-40 gals which i replace via pump from my mixing tank when I am done.
 
I d a 35 gallon change twice a week. I have a a T in the line from the tank to the sump that is attached to the drain, a turn of a quarter turn valve dumps the water down the drain. An external pump attached to my mixing vat returns water to the 200 gallon sump
 
I drain form my DT with out any problems. I just use a large hose and drain into buckets so I know how much I am taking out. It only takes me about 30 minutes to drain and refill from start to finish. I tried draining from my sump but it was just to much of a hassle for my particular setup. I only use natural sea water to change with so its a little more work for me but I don't mind since I don't have to buy salt mix or use my RO water to make such a large amount of water.
 
Most large tanks that I am aware of all do water changes. Personally, I am a fan of several frequent small changes rather than a big change less frequently.

I do 40gal (~8%) PWC's weekly and on occasion will add a second change in the same week. I do so by draining half the water from my frag tank which holds about 90g. Several corals are exposed during this process which takes about 10-15min but it doesn't seem to bother anything.
 
I have 500 gallons total, and about 100 gallons in the sump, I just pull the water straight from the sump via siphon into the back yard (where it mostly flows under my house I think (pier and beam)). Then I refill from the 43g brute I use to mix the water in and I'm done!
 
my sump is connected to my house main drain. i turn a couple valves and drain 40g in about 5 min. then i pump new water into the sump. i do this every other week on my 240g dt.
 
My old water goes down a floor drain that runs into the yard. Ironically, after dumping 40g per week, I have not noticed any dead vegetation.
 
My old water goes down a floor drain that runs into the yard. Ironically, after dumping 40g per week, I have not noticed any dead vegetation.

ur lucky. i used to drain it onto the grass now ive got a big dead patch:spin1: less lawn to cut i figure.
 
Any pictures of the drain outputs as part of the plumbing? Is it better to drain from return pump or naturally from the display tank? Unfortunately, everything has to be done under my display tank so I won't have the luxury of a fish room or basement. Right now a very long phyton hose works great but I figure I automate as much as I can. Thanks for all the suggestions.
 
Back
Top