<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=15374756#post15374756 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by JTL
The 2x2 is 52 years old and still straight as an arrow. I can't hardly put screws in it with my impact driver. I am going with plywood to be safe. Thanks for the comments.
John
Insane, I am doing a DIY rimless. Still trying to decide on the overflow and whether to go closed loop. What are you doing?
I am doing a 3/8" glass 36"x36"x24" 135g rimless with a 6"tall x6"deep x 36"wide coast to coast overflow. I won't be having fish so I don't plan on having teeth on the overflow. No big deal to add teeth if I change my mind on the fish thing. It will have one durso standpipe, one full siphon standpipe and one emergency overflow standpipe all centered and spaced 4" apart using 1" schedule 80 bulkheads with 1 1/2" standpipes. Two 3/4" returns, one at each corner inside the overflow with 3/4" loc-line split to have two 1/2 loc-lines on each side with both sizes of flare nozzles.
This will have a flow rate of 1,000gph for an all SPS reef. In addition I will have one vortech20 to do a gyre wave. The kind of wave that looks like it is going to just come out of the tank on all 4 sides. With what those vortechs can do you don't need plumbing or even wires in a tank and you can blow the water out if you wanted to.
Now the sump/refugium I have designed will be very special as I have yet to see anyone have one like the one I have drawn up that can handle 1,000gph going over a refugium without ripping it apart, hold a good sized skimmer, heater and additional eqiupment. The whole thing is only 30"x24"x18" to fit under the rimless plus leave room for other equipment. Am doing a 250w 6,500k MH on the fuge. It will cost less than $200.00 to build. The tank is under $600.00. GC wanted close to $1,000.00 for the same tank with a regular overflow, only one drain bulkhead and only one return bulkhead.
You can do a center overflow which is what I originally thought of doing, but in doing that the thickness of the bottom glass has to be greatly increased to handle the stress of being drilled in the middle plus holding the weight. A 6"x6" center overflow would not hold the standpipes I am going to use. You could do a durso and an emergency plus your return if you don't need the high flow. If you don't have the room behind a tank for the plumbing you can just take the overflow all the way down to the bottom of the tank and have the bulkheads in the bottom instead of it just going across the top but you lose valuable real estate in doing so. That would be better done on the end of a tank.
Mine will basically be a cube without the extra 12" on top so the overflow is 36" wide wherever I put it. I am mainly doing it so wide because I want the gyre wave. They are so cool. The heights of the elbows in the overflow will have to be tweaked a bit so I don't lose the siphon but the 3rd standpipe will make up the difference while the other two adjust....In theory. LOL This is my firs tank build but I have a few things on my side that give me a big edge.
Will also have 5 way lighting on the reef to simulate sunrise to sunset. No fancy controller, just lots-o'-timers. Blue LEDs, 192w PC actinics, 192w PC 10k daylights, 800w 20k MH. MH's will be seperately controlled. And as mntioned before the 250w 6,500k MH on the fuge on a reverse cycle from the reef MH.
And as of today, I am going to make the top rim of the tank with a slightly beveled polished edge. All edges were going to be polished anyways. Now I just want a cool top edge. Like an Elos (thanks uncleof6)

but just slightly more beveled to make it stand out more.
Frank
P.S. That would be white pine 2x2's. Predrill your screw holes to keep from snapping off your screws.