Sump

Let me try to address this:
A sump and a canister are not the same thing. A canister filter literally filters the water using sponges and media. A sump adds additional water capacity and a convenient place to house equipment (heaters/skimmers/etc), live rock, macroalgae, and other things too.

Generally, canister filters are frowned upon because the sponges trap detritus and create nitrates. They require constant, and consistent, maintenance to keep the nitrates down and the media "charged". Now, canister filters are very convenient for running carbon and other media, but there are other ways to do that as well (such as a phosban reactor). I have a number of idle canisters, but I don't use them on my tank unless I need to.

As for making a sump under your tank, your best bet is to put the largest tank you can fit under your current display tank and that will be your sump (I have a 20g under my 75g display right now). You don't "need" another cabinet.

As for sump design, check out Melev's Sump Designs for lots of info. But if you use a glass tank, like a 20g you get at Petsmart, then you silicone baffles into the tank to create the compartments. HTH
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=10564953#post10564953 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by der_wille_zur_macht
No, you can use a hang-on overflow to get the water from the display tank down to the sump, and plumb the return line over the back of the display.

however the potential for something bad happening(spills, tank being draining etc) is greater then drilling the tank and the sump.
 
i´ve got a 95 gal display tank. i´ve calculated that i can easily fit a
15 gallon sump in one of my cabinet under my tank. Is this going to be enough?
 
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