<img src="/images/welcome.gif" width="500" height="62"><br><b><i><big><big>To Reef Central</b></i></big></big><a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7367710#post7367710 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Home_Depot
I want to get rid of my HOB overflow but I do not want to yake down my tank. Can you drill holes with water still in it if you drop the water down a ways???
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7379881#post7379881 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Grace's Dad
So is there an attachement I can get?
I'd really like to use the Dewalt because it has the slower speed, and I'd like to be able to use my larger bit.
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7382872#post7382872 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by AquaDiva
This is a great thread...and very timely for me.![]()
Has anybody found a site/thread which details how many and what size hole you can drill before compromising the integrity of the tank?
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7351055#post7351055 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by poopsko24
I want to take off my hang on overflow box and drill the back top of my tank. I will drill for two 1 1/2" bulkheads, how far aprat from one another do I have to be on these ? And from that I woul like to make up the smallest possible glass overflow box, i will silicone it to the inside, but what size should i be if i plan on roughly 1200 gph going through ? I would like to do something like 12" L x 4" or 5" W and I'm not too sure at all if the height of it will matter ? I was thinking just enough to cover the bulkheads, is there a certain height I need to be? thanx all.





<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7383490#post7383490 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by phallock
Was just reading through this thread and thought I'd respond to this with some observations from personal experience with a horizontal overflow:
1) If you're going to do a Durso style, with 90 elbows in your overflow box, I'd recommend a slip bulkhead on the flange side and slip/street 90's. Mine are threaded and I need extra space to seat the 90 before I twist it in.
2) You want #1 because the wider your box sticks out, the more it ptentially affects your lighting. I'm finding this out the hard way. I made mine 4" wide, and now will have difficulty fitting a 6 light T5 retro in the space between the front of the tank and the overflow.
If I had to do over again (and I just might) I'd look at how much clearance I'd need for a slip bulkhead (flange side) and elbow, then make the box just wide enough to accommodate that. 90's are a pain to thread in an overflow box anyway. Right now I could get way with a 3/4" narrower box, maybe even more with slip fittings.
All that being said, I have 40" of scum-busting skimming "surface" and when you look at the tank from a few feet away, you hardly notice the overflow. It's a great alternative - to me even preferable - for brick owners.
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7383490#post7383490 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by phallock
Was just reading through this thread and thought I'd respond to this with some observations from personal experience with a horizontal overflow:
1) If you're going to do a Durso style, with 90 elbows in your overflow box, I'd recommend a slip bulkhead on the flange side and slip/street 90's. Mine are threaded and I need extra space to seat the 90 before I twist it in.
2) You want #1 because the wider your box sticks out, the more it ptentially affects your lighting. I'm finding this out the hard way. I made mine 4" wide, and now will have difficulty fitting a 6 light T5 retro in the space between the front of the tank and the overflow.
If I had to do over again (and I just might) I'd look at how much clearance I'd need for a slip bulkhead (flange side) and elbow, then make the box just wide enough to accommodate that. 90's are a pain to thread in an overflow box anyway. Right now I could get way with a 3/4" narrower box, maybe even more with slip fittings.
All that being said, I have 40" of scum-busting skimming "surface" and when you look at the tank from a few feet away, you hardly notice the overflow. It's a great alternative - to me even preferable - for brick owners.
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