Ok now that the tank is about 95% built, and is a week into cycling, I figured I should write up the build.
I started this hobby in Florida, in 1995. I bought a 55 gal tank, and we went to the ocean and filled it with sea water, rocks, and various things. Had no idea what we were doing. We bought a HOB filter at the pet store's recommendation, with - TA DA - Bio Wheels. What fun. Tank was often pretty green. We had a couple of florescent strips, fish tank color. LFS was very, uh, helpful. I feel bad for the fish we went through.
Navy moved us to Italy, where we set up the tank once with local sea life. Nothing lived much, and LFS' did not exist in Sardegna where we lived. Then they moved us to England.
In 2002, I built a stand. I got a copy of Simplified Reefkeeping, which really opened my eyes to what I was doing wrong. I had the tank back-drilled, built a stand, put in a sump, put the bioballs (that I bought at some point before) into storage, got a skimmer, put several powerheads in the tank, etc. Here's what resulted from that:
This was after maybe 8 months running. Things did so well that I decided to get a "real" tank. I had a 180g 6x2x2 built (I think it was about $250, seemed cheap at the time. It's 3/8" glass, braced at the top. I built a stand, here's a pic of it empty:
I bought a whole bunch of 240v equipment for it - pumps, electronic ballasts, etc. Not enough lighting it turns out, but I figured I'd light one side then add on for the other side. I got the temp right, with RODI water from the store (three 10 gal jugs at a time till it was full), salinity right, etc. Then I transferred everything over, and it cycled and everything died. It was bare bottom, I should add... and there was about 80 lbs of LR in that 55g tank. Shortly after this, we found out we had to move back to the USA, so it was just as well, I guess.
So here in Kansas, that tank has been sitting, just like that (see pic above), for 5 years. Finally we decided to do something about it. One of the selling features of this house was the unfinished storage room in the basement, about 4 feel below the level of the family room - perfect place for the sump.
I found this site, and did a lot of reading (still reading, too). Read up on deep sand beds, and refugi-whats?, and pumps, and lighting, etc. Went searching for lights, and found a good deal on two 400w MH "fixtures" - ballast, reflector housing (meant for a warehouse I think), and 20k XM bulb, from my LFS. So I built a canopy for that. Below is the side view, you can see the fans, the rails for the lights to slide back for opening the front. In this pic, the front half is in the garage being modified (it would stick closed, and was too bulky for small tasks like feeding the fish, so I'm putting doors in it).
Below is the front view with water, and the lights on:
Next is the front of the canopy, under construction:
I put in a 20 amp dedicated circuit, wired into a GFCI outlet. That feeds two additional protected outlets, one controlled by a switch for easy pump shutoff. I was worried about the load, but so far it runs 800w of lights, a 300w computer power supply, two 500w titanium heaters, a Dart pump, a viaAqua 4900 subm. pump, two powerheads in the tank, and 40w of flourescent lighting.
Continued...
I started this hobby in Florida, in 1995. I bought a 55 gal tank, and we went to the ocean and filled it with sea water, rocks, and various things. Had no idea what we were doing. We bought a HOB filter at the pet store's recommendation, with - TA DA - Bio Wheels. What fun. Tank was often pretty green. We had a couple of florescent strips, fish tank color. LFS was very, uh, helpful. I feel bad for the fish we went through.
Navy moved us to Italy, where we set up the tank once with local sea life. Nothing lived much, and LFS' did not exist in Sardegna where we lived. Then they moved us to England.
In 2002, I built a stand. I got a copy of Simplified Reefkeeping, which really opened my eyes to what I was doing wrong. I had the tank back-drilled, built a stand, put in a sump, put the bioballs (that I bought at some point before) into storage, got a skimmer, put several powerheads in the tank, etc. Here's what resulted from that:
This was after maybe 8 months running. Things did so well that I decided to get a "real" tank. I had a 180g 6x2x2 built (I think it was about $250, seemed cheap at the time. It's 3/8" glass, braced at the top. I built a stand, here's a pic of it empty:
I bought a whole bunch of 240v equipment for it - pumps, electronic ballasts, etc. Not enough lighting it turns out, but I figured I'd light one side then add on for the other side. I got the temp right, with RODI water from the store (three 10 gal jugs at a time till it was full), salinity right, etc. Then I transferred everything over, and it cycled and everything died. It was bare bottom, I should add... and there was about 80 lbs of LR in that 55g tank. Shortly after this, we found out we had to move back to the USA, so it was just as well, I guess.
So here in Kansas, that tank has been sitting, just like that (see pic above), for 5 years. Finally we decided to do something about it. One of the selling features of this house was the unfinished storage room in the basement, about 4 feel below the level of the family room - perfect place for the sump.
I found this site, and did a lot of reading (still reading, too). Read up on deep sand beds, and refugi-whats?, and pumps, and lighting, etc. Went searching for lights, and found a good deal on two 400w MH "fixtures" - ballast, reflector housing (meant for a warehouse I think), and 20k XM bulb, from my LFS. So I built a canopy for that. Below is the side view, you can see the fans, the rails for the lights to slide back for opening the front. In this pic, the front half is in the garage being modified (it would stick closed, and was too bulky for small tasks like feeding the fish, so I'm putting doors in it).
Below is the front view with water, and the lights on:
Next is the front of the canopy, under construction:
I put in a 20 amp dedicated circuit, wired into a GFCI outlet. That feeds two additional protected outlets, one controlled by a switch for easy pump shutoff. I was worried about the load, but so far it runs 800w of lights, a 300w computer power supply, two 500w titanium heaters, a Dart pump, a viaAqua 4900 subm. pump, two powerheads in the tank, and 40w of flourescent lighting.
Continued...
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