Hi all,
Looking to do a Bean overflow on my 40b with 20l sump. Ideally, I want an external box with minimal intrusion inside the tank, similar to this. This is my first salt tank and i've never drilled before, so I don't even know where to begin as far as plans and dimensions go. Anyone ever done this same setup but with 1" PVC instead of 1.5"? If so, I would greatly appreciate pics on where you drilled, how far down, the spacing, etc.
Thanks!
Hi all,
Looking to do a Bean overflow on my 40b with 20l sump. Ideally, I want an external box with minimal intrusion inside the tank, similar to this. This is my first salt tank and i've never drilled before, so I don't even know where to begin as far as plans and dimensions go. Anyone ever done this same setup but with 1" PVC instead of 1.5"? If so, I would greatly appreciate pics on where you drilled, how far down, the spacing, etc.
Thanks!
Man - i came to ask exactly the same question.
had a quick discussion with sleepydoc and tidus as well on a separate thread.
I am getting a 6ft tank... 125-150G.
And i was originally planning on getting a 24" reefsavy ghost overflow.
But then in the past 48 hours reading hundreds of posts on this thread by Bean Animal and Uncleof6 - It seems like that would be a BAD BAD idea.
And i need to put a C2C or atleast an elongated overflow box INSIDE the tank
From which the 3 pipes will run directly.
So just like StrangeDejavu - I am trying to see if there is a way to put the overflow box OUTSIDE the tank and have a way of getting the water flow into it. Could the holes I drill into the back of tank just work as a drain into that overflow box outside?
The biggest charm of that 24" ghost overflow from reefsavy - was the clean look of the tank... and having a overflow box inside the tank with pipes sticking out just doesnt look all that great.
I fully understand the function over form discussion - just looking to see if there any options is all.
Thanks again. This thread was crazy informative.
I'll be doing a 40b in a few weeks and I'm going with 1" pipe. I'd like to know how long are the slots in the overflow and how far apart they are on an internal box? What are the benefits to going box on the outside back of the tank?
1" pipe will be plenty for a 40b.
You can either do a strictly internal overflow, something like beananimal did in his original design, or do an internal/external style, like rickztahone did in his. Both work. The internal/external minimizes the amount of tank space taken by the box, but is a bit more complex to build.
If you have a glass tank (like I assume you would for a 40b,) you need to be aware that you can't glue/silicone an acrylic box to a glass tank. You would need to have a 5-walled box and use bulkheads with gaskets to hold it in place and keep it sealed. If you try to make it out of glass, you have to make it big enough such that the bottom panel of glass in the external box doesn't crack.
I'm afraid I don't understand your question in regards to the length of the slots in the overflow box.
Oh - the teeth on the overflow.
It depends on your flow and the total length of the weir. There are many people (myself included) that advocate for no teeth. They tend to reduce flow & surface skimming and potentially add bubbles & noise.
If you have your heart set on them there are online calculators that let you calculate the depth of water flowing over a weir. For the length I would take the total length of your overflow and divide it by 2, then double the depth given by the calculator.
Here's a better one. Enter notch width, tooth width, total overflow length, deduction for edges (if you have a section at the face/side junction that is wider than the teeth, for instance), and it calculates the depth of notch needed for given flow (which would go to the top of the overflow box)
So if you have 1" notches but want to only have 0.5" of water up on them, use the 0.5 depth.
Also has a Weir calculator so you can see the difference that not having teeth makes (same as above post, only change the notched weir section on this one)