Re: Deep Cement Bed?
Re: Deep Cement Bed?
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=10721411#post10721411 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Insane Reefer
Hey 
Wanted to ask.
I am getting tired of the whole sandbed thing, and am getting ready to setup a 20G long, and have been thinking of a "deep cement bed", and wanted to get thoughts on it. I'm planning a built in refugium and and overflow, and all rock will be permanently attached.
Wanted to get the thoughts of people on this, in particular, Mr Wilson, Cayars and Travis.
Thanks!
I've already read Mr. Wilson's reply to this and more or less agree with the KISS theory and using water changes for this size tank.
I'm not sure however that a "Deep Cement Bed" is the answer either. I'm not really sure I'd want to answer how to set it up without knowing what you intend to use it for (IE Fish only, LPS, SPS, etc).
You mentioned a built in refugium and an overflow. How much of the 20G were you going to use for the refugium and why? If you have an overflow I'm assuming you'll also have a sump which could house the fuge so you may not need to give up display space for the fuge. <-- not a right or wrong thing, just asking.
Assuming you have an overflow and a sump. Is this a dedicated sump or would it be tied into another system with shared water?
Elaborating on this last thing a little. I've got a big system by most counts but also have around 10 tanks that are 10 or 20 gallon displays. Some are stand alone (testing and playing) while others are connected into my main system. A cheap and easy I've found to connect small systems into other larger systems is to:
1) pickup 2 Aqualifter pumps (3gph) - $12 each
2) pickup 1 electrical topoff unit OR float switch $15-$50ish
Then what I do is have one Aqualifter pump constantly pulling water out of the small tank while you use the other pump connected to the "topoff unit" (avoid over filling) to move your other system water into the small tank. A tiny restrictor on the first pump helps make sure you can't remove more water then you add.
Ideally you pull water from the small tank at the top of the tank and push the new water in lower in the tank. I like this arrangement because if the topoff pump were to fail the pump pulling water out of the small tank can't drain the tank since it's high up in the water column.
In order to use some type of method like this you do need to be able to fish 2 small airline style hoses between the systems. It's not for everyone but for those that can do it... they will have less water problems in the small tank assuming the "big" tank is stable and correctly being run.
Carlo
PS depending on head height the Aqualifter may not be a good choice and maybe a mini-jet would be better but the idea is the same 2 pumps with some type of controller to regulate water level.