Yup. The title says it all, except for the stupid way I made it happen...
THE MISTAKE
I ordered some cool tubing holder from Avast Marine (RC sponsor), and set about using it to better secure all the tubes hanging into my sump; pH probe, temp probe, calcium line, alkalinity line, ATO line, and AWC saltwater line. I did it one evening, and went to bed. Not worried. It was an easy change, everything VERY secure now.
THE DISCOVERY
The next night, shortly before bed, I heard my RO/DI rattle. That's normal in January, it does that when the water coming in is very cold. But in a few minutes, I heard it rattle again. Huh?
And in a few minutes, again. Huh? I'm not mixing salt. And the only other place that could be taking on RO/DI is my top off reservoir. But there's no way I could be topping off that often.
I look at the tank. Nope no leaks. Sump's fine. So if my ATO IS topping off too frequently, where's the water going. No way it's evaporating that fast.
And that's when I saw it... my Auto Water Change saltwater reservoir! It was overflowing!
When I put the saltwater line in my sump the night before, I made the mistake of submerging the opening of the tube. So where it used to be over my sump, not it was IN it. And siphoning water out! OMG!
That meant that as it slowly siphoned water out for 24 hours, the ATO was faithfully topping off with fresh! :eek1:
THE CORRECTIVE ACTION
I knew there was nothing I could to at bed time. It's not like it was a quick fix. And my extra saltwater was ruined! For the last 24 hours it was getting ever increasingly low salinity tank water siphoned into it.
So I started making a new batch of RO/DI, went to bed, and mentally braced myself for the worst.
Next morning - no surprise... 1.015 salinity. Actually it appeared to be a bit less, but I was not wasting time on a 2nd test to be certain. Dangerously low required immediate action - and I had a fresh batch of RO/DI waiting.
But going from 1.015 to 1.025 is a BIG shift, and I was afraid to do it quickly. So I mixed up a batch of extra saline saltmix, and rigged a mechanism that slowly drained tank water (real slow) and dripped extra saline into the sump. I've got a total system volume of 36-40g, and I did this with approximately 30g of hypersaline saltmix for 36 hours.
Now the tank is 1.0235. I'll slowly raise it to 1.025 by topping off with salt water (normal mix) over the next couple of days.
THE DAMAGE
Amazingly the concentrated salt mix not only corrected my salinity (almost) but also brought my other critical levels in line too. pH, Ca, Alk are all fine. Mg is a bit low (1260), but that's easily fixed.
And the tank inhabitants seems to be MOSTLY doing well. Even my rock flower anenome - who was initially looking BAD - is looking close to normal now. Fish, shrimp, crabs... everyone seems fine. Amazingly. The one set of inhabitants are not faring as well. Can you guess? Zoas.
I'm sure there was a big, big swing in Alk, and they don't like that. So we'll see.
LESSONS LEARNED?
I'd love to toss this up to a newbie reefing mistake. That would be a nice excuse. But those of you that know me know that I am aquarium plumbing animal. This error was not reef specific. Bad things happening because of a siphon created by a tube that should never be submerged can happen in any complex aquarium plumbing situation.
Nope. I've got no excuse. This was just stupid. And careless.
And while I hate to say it... it is also a consequence of using complex systems. Goodness knows I love them. No KISS for me. They are fun to build, and can take a LOT of the drudgery out of owning aquariums. But every once in a while it backfires. Like now.
I'll let you know how the inhabitants fare over time. Sorry about the long post.
THE MISTAKE
I ordered some cool tubing holder from Avast Marine (RC sponsor), and set about using it to better secure all the tubes hanging into my sump; pH probe, temp probe, calcium line, alkalinity line, ATO line, and AWC saltwater line. I did it one evening, and went to bed. Not worried. It was an easy change, everything VERY secure now.

THE DISCOVERY
The next night, shortly before bed, I heard my RO/DI rattle. That's normal in January, it does that when the water coming in is very cold. But in a few minutes, I heard it rattle again. Huh?
And in a few minutes, again. Huh? I'm not mixing salt. And the only other place that could be taking on RO/DI is my top off reservoir. But there's no way I could be topping off that often.
I look at the tank. Nope no leaks. Sump's fine. So if my ATO IS topping off too frequently, where's the water going. No way it's evaporating that fast.
And that's when I saw it... my Auto Water Change saltwater reservoir! It was overflowing!
When I put the saltwater line in my sump the night before, I made the mistake of submerging the opening of the tube. So where it used to be over my sump, not it was IN it. And siphoning water out! OMG!
That meant that as it slowly siphoned water out for 24 hours, the ATO was faithfully topping off with fresh! :eek1:
THE CORRECTIVE ACTION
I knew there was nothing I could to at bed time. It's not like it was a quick fix. And my extra saltwater was ruined! For the last 24 hours it was getting ever increasingly low salinity tank water siphoned into it.
So I started making a new batch of RO/DI, went to bed, and mentally braced myself for the worst.
Next morning - no surprise... 1.015 salinity. Actually it appeared to be a bit less, but I was not wasting time on a 2nd test to be certain. Dangerously low required immediate action - and I had a fresh batch of RO/DI waiting.
But going from 1.015 to 1.025 is a BIG shift, and I was afraid to do it quickly. So I mixed up a batch of extra saline saltmix, and rigged a mechanism that slowly drained tank water (real slow) and dripped extra saline into the sump. I've got a total system volume of 36-40g, and I did this with approximately 30g of hypersaline saltmix for 36 hours.
Now the tank is 1.0235. I'll slowly raise it to 1.025 by topping off with salt water (normal mix) over the next couple of days.
THE DAMAGE
Amazingly the concentrated salt mix not only corrected my salinity (almost) but also brought my other critical levels in line too. pH, Ca, Alk are all fine. Mg is a bit low (1260), but that's easily fixed.
And the tank inhabitants seems to be MOSTLY doing well. Even my rock flower anenome - who was initially looking BAD - is looking close to normal now. Fish, shrimp, crabs... everyone seems fine. Amazingly. The one set of inhabitants are not faring as well. Can you guess? Zoas.
I'm sure there was a big, big swing in Alk, and they don't like that. So we'll see.
LESSONS LEARNED?
I'd love to toss this up to a newbie reefing mistake. That would be a nice excuse. But those of you that know me know that I am aquarium plumbing animal. This error was not reef specific. Bad things happening because of a siphon created by a tube that should never be submerged can happen in any complex aquarium plumbing situation.
Nope. I've got no excuse. This was just stupid. And careless.
And while I hate to say it... it is also a consequence of using complex systems. Goodness knows I love them. No KISS for me. They are fun to build, and can take a LOT of the drudgery out of owning aquariums. But every once in a while it backfires. Like now.
I'll let you know how the inhabitants fare over time. Sorry about the long post.
