Triple-S Fish Ranch - 1700gal 164” x 48” x 56” SPS peninsula build

Tagging along :)
Incredible house and tank! My kids immediately asked if it was big enough for them to snorkel in lol...

Thanks for joining, kolakao155 and girlygears13!

That Geny is natural gas right?
Yes, natural gas or can be adapted to propane.

I see you've made some good progress. Just a heads up on the lighting, I have found par at around 100-140 from the cannons is ideal. It may seem low but around 200-250 and sps bleach pretty bad, something about the light produced by LEDs... Its funny, a coral that fell off its pearch to the sandbed 5' bellow was at 80 par while everything else was 175+ and that one was by far the best looking, not that the rest were bleached just a bit pale. Corals 3' from the cannons were great looking from the sides but white from above... Also as with most lights I have found the top down appearance to be much better than from the side( on corals 6' from the lights not 3'). After adding dimmers to several strategic groupings of leds colors are much improved. I'm starting to experiment with aiming some of the cannons from the side, ie angle the left ones to the right and the right ones to the left about 20-30 degrees , to help with shadowing from rocks and get more color in the viewing pane. Basicaly aim your lights above your rock features at the one next to it, and the ones over that one back at the first rather than straight down. After a few months this seems to be a verry good idea!

Your 2kw heater will do the job but it might run for a while. On the 6k gal system 3.5kw took 3 days to heat the water from 65-75. There was a significant loss from how the ac ducts were aimed at that system though. Either way you will be fine, just may take some time to adjust the temp. I have seen boilers on large systems outdoor systems at zoos for housing more tropical animals like caymans but that's way overkill for an indoor tank.

Can't wait to see this tank up and running!

Thanks as always, Epicreefer, I can't say how great it is to hear from someone with hands on experience deploying the Ecoxotics in larger systems. Thanks for the tip about aiming the lights at an angle. The lights currently angle in a few degrees toward each other, but nothing like the amount you describe as I was worried about PAR at the bottom after 30" of air plus 54" of water. If shadowing or light aesthetics are an issue I'm thinking I'll add 100W cannons on the perimeter in the corners and on the support walls between the access doors.

Good to know on the heater sizing. I may not even do an inline heater at all. Will start with just 3 old 800W submersible heaters thrown directly in the display (for initial setup only), plus setting the HVACs for the canopy and fish room on 85'. Will be interested to see how quickly the water temperature moves in this setup.
 
October: Aquascape

October: Aquascape

October was mostly taken up with media room build out, but made some good progress on the aquascape thanks to Timfish. Seeing him go to work with a hammer drill, chisel, carbide hole bits and PVC, I can tell it would have taken me about 5 times as long, a lot of broken rock, and probably a fair bit of bloodshed to make this much progress on my own.

Building the main pillar
The main pillar is 44" tall, to allow about 9" of water column above the top for coral growth. 3/4" and 1/2" PVC skeletal structure.
aquarium-Oct-13+1.jpg


Pillar Close-up
Exposed PVC will be hidden with aragacrete before water goes in the tank
aquarium-Oct-13+2.jpg



First 2 Pillars in the Tank
Timfish posing by his handiwork. I drilled a few of the holes but otherwise was only dubiously useful as 'artistic director'. No more rock work will go in the tank until after I complete all of the in- and above-tank plumbing since it will be much easier to install if I can walk around in the tank.
aquarium-Oct-13+3.jpg


4' Arch Assembly
aquarium-Oct-13+15.jpg


Canopy Electrical and Carpentry Completed
All exposed birch will get 3 coats of marine epoxy
aquarium-Oct-13+5.jpg


Back side of Peninsula
15" deep cabinet at end of tank will hold tongs, hose, scrapers, collapsible rolling scaffold, stepladder, assorted other tools and dry food that I need near the display tank.
aquarium-Oct-13+6.jpg
 
Last edited:
October Update: Fish Room

October Update: Fish Room

In the fish room, finished the flooring, paint, HVAC, plumbing, electrical, and the large cabinetry wall. Still to go: lab desk cabinetry, wood stands for reactors and 2-part reservoirs, euro size washer for filter socks. Steel stands for the coral and fish quarantine tanks are due in this week.

Fish Room
Flooring and paint completed. Foreground portion of room is for QT and supplies. Far section is for sump and filtration and dosing. Equipment in the filtration room is in rough position. Coral QT temporarily on floor where the rack of four 75gal fish quarantine tanks will go.
aquarium-Oct-13+8.jpg


Filtration Room
Sump and skimmer on north wall. East wall has the reservoirs and mixing tanks for RO/DI and Salt water. Between the skimmer and black RO/DI reservoir are the two 30gal tanks for alkalinity and calcium dosing, not visible in this pic.
aquarium-Oct-13+9.jpg


Cabinetry Wall
12' x 9' x 30" deep wall of cabinetry. Not yet fully organized but it does indeed successfully hold all of the assorted junk that in our previous house took over cabinetry in 4 different rooms, the garage, and an outside storage shed. Hooray!
aquarium-Oct-13+10.jpg


Center Cabinet
Center cabinet has three full-extension drawers rated for 500 pounds each. Perfect for accommodating up to 15 buckets of salt, bulk media and supplements.
aquarium-Oct-13+11.jpg



Large Drawers
36" x 30" drawers can hold a decent amount of kit. Lesson learned in the layout, though: drawers should have gone on the left side of the cabinetry so that the room entry door could be opened without risk of damage (cabinet door would just close when hit by the entry door).
aquarium-Oct-13+12.jpg



Left and Right Cabinets Open
aquarium-Oct-13+13.jpg


Fish Room and Garage Flooring
In hindsight, would have used same flooring in fish room as in garage. Chose Marmoleum for the fish room because I wanted a material that wouldn't chip or break like tile and would be immune to moisture and chemicals. Only later, when we started getting into the details of the garage redo did I learn about commercial grade porcelain tile: 30% harder than granite, un-stainable, tough enough to be used in the Ferrari & Maserati factories, and no more expensive than Marmoleum. Another downside to the Marmoleum is that the sheets are too thick to bend with a multi slope floor, forcing us to position the floor drains on one side of the room rather than in the middle.
aquarium-Oct-13+14.jpg



View from Media Room Bar Area
Can begin to really see how the tank will look in the room. Canopy and base cabinet doors due in 2 weeks
aquarium-Oct-13+7.jpg


View from Room Entrance
Probably another 4 or 5 months from having fish in the room anywhere other than on the TV.
aquarium-Oct-13+16.jpg
 
Last edited:
Nice job Paul.

Keep up the good work.

What are you putting as a cover on the windows?
Glaze or tint?
 
dont even wanna think of the expense all this is costing....but if you have it you picked the right hobby my friend!! lol GO FOR IT!
 
Goodness, there's almost more money in just the woodwork in that room than most people invest in an entire home. Simply beautiful. Thanks for sharing!
 
Large Drawers
36" x 30" drawers can hold a decent amount of kit. Lesson learned in the layout, though: drawers should have gone on the left side of the cabinetry so that the room entry door could be opened without risk of damage (cabinet door would just close when hit by the entry door).

The cabinetry appears to be symmetrical, is it modular enough to switch the drawers to the left side without too much rework? (Nicely done by the way.)
 
Back
Top