reenact12321
New member
I'm moving into my first home and anxiously awaiting the moving day for my 2 year old 40 Breeder system. It's been a good experience and I'm really tempted to take the "if ain't broke, don't fix it" approach to its filtration and general configuration.
However, I have this whole unfinished basement to play with and as I am a bachelor, essentially the sky and my pocket book are the limit.
I've been reading a lot about surge tanks and also this very interesting article about emulating the natural biomes of the reef rather than the "sea gardens" we normally construct.
My concept would be to have a tank with a linear layout from forereef to flats, to patch reef. With heavy surge coming over the rock wall and creating lots of turbulence on the flats, but dispersing by the time it reaches the back of the tank (obviously the odd power head would be employed in the back to supplement water movement to appropriate levels.
The flats down to the patch would allow me to keep high flow, high light corals on this higher rock channel, and the patch reef would allow for more softies, sand bed items and lower light corals as well as a large bowl for fish. Replicating the lagoon area even in another tank sounds like a self-defeating measure as its really the stagnant compost part of the reef and would be rather dense with cyano and other things you would not want even connected to your system.
The general execution of this concept would rely on constructing a basic rock structure in the tank that live rock would then sit on, rather than just piling live rock into a giant, unstable mound. I'm looking for suggestions of something that will hold up to saltwater but is shapeable enough I can avoid it looking like I just poured a bunch of cement into the tank.
Also, this will mean a substantial loss of volume at the front of the tank, so would a downward facing L and custom build be more adventageous in terms of wasted space?
However, I have this whole unfinished basement to play with and as I am a bachelor, essentially the sky and my pocket book are the limit.
I've been reading a lot about surge tanks and also this very interesting article about emulating the natural biomes of the reef rather than the "sea gardens" we normally construct.
My concept would be to have a tank with a linear layout from forereef to flats, to patch reef. With heavy surge coming over the rock wall and creating lots of turbulence on the flats, but dispersing by the time it reaches the back of the tank (obviously the odd power head would be employed in the back to supplement water movement to appropriate levels.
The flats down to the patch would allow me to keep high flow, high light corals on this higher rock channel, and the patch reef would allow for more softies, sand bed items and lower light corals as well as a large bowl for fish. Replicating the lagoon area even in another tank sounds like a self-defeating measure as its really the stagnant compost part of the reef and would be rather dense with cyano and other things you would not want even connected to your system.
The general execution of this concept would rely on constructing a basic rock structure in the tank that live rock would then sit on, rather than just piling live rock into a giant, unstable mound. I'm looking for suggestions of something that will hold up to saltwater but is shapeable enough I can avoid it looking like I just poured a bunch of cement into the tank.
Also, this will mean a substantial loss of volume at the front of the tank, so would a downward facing L and custom build be more adventageous in terms of wasted space?