Ok, last pictures of the day, I promise! The plumbing is all connected, the new tank is in position, all the electrical is connected, and my RO/DI unit is WAY too damn slow! (only 100 gpd
). The tank is perfectly level with about 100 gallons of saltwater in it, and the floor joists show no deflection / settling at all with the massive support beam I used directly below the front of the aquarium.
This is the return and drain plumbing all connected together with unions for easy of maintenance. I can crawl underneath the stand and reach upwards to fiddle with ball valves, disconnect plumbing, etc.
Feeling good about things, I decided to go ahead and wet-test the plumbing and tank, which basically boiled down to me turning on all the circuit breakers, choking the return pump's output ball valve about halfway, flipping the switch, and running like heck back upstairs to frantically watch with a high power flashlights for leaks. Thankfully my mediocre plumbing skills came through for me and all of the glued joints held, and all of the threaded fittings were leak-free. I won't be able to test the Beananimal drain system (for those of you who read Reef Central) until I make a LOT more water, but that should only take a couple more days. I snapped a few pics of the return flow at 1/2 strength:
I didn't think to take any pics of it, but I trimmed down the street-90* fittings that I used for the return ports by cutting off the end of the fitting right at the threads. Effectively it's a straight fitting right now with a large hole in the side, which I believe should make the output flow fan out rather than blasting the heck out of everything in it's path with 3,000 gph of water.
After sending about 40 gallons to the display tank at 1/2 power, I decided to go ahead and go for broke and open it up all the way. Sort of hard to tell from the pics (and since the return nozzles fan out the water so much), but the water flow is VERY strong. I can't wait to see what it looks like when the tank is full! I drained the 150 gallon rubbermaid sump from 2/3 to almost empty in as much time as it took to run upstairs, take two photos, and run back downstairs to shut off the return pump before it started sucking air. Probably 3 minutes total
Since things were going well to that point, I figured I might as well take the Koralia Magnum 8 powerheads out of their boxes and give them a whirl. One powerhead is currently operating in my 100 gallon tank, so I only have three running in the big tank:
Underwater:
I can't really express how much I like these Koralia pumps... These Magnum 8s might even be too strong for this tank
. I'll know better once it's full and I can see how things go with the sand. As it is with about 120 gallons in the display (about 8" deep?) the water looks like a frothing / boiling vortex of destruction. I'm very happy with the pumps, I have them sitting about 1" below the water surface currently, and they're not sucking in any air at ALL. Looks like the problems I always had with Koralia 3/4 pumps and vortexes sucking in air are a thing of the past with the Magnum line, they're almost dead silent (just a slight humming noise, can barely hear it over my 100 gallon display's cooling fan), and they're pushing a LOT of water. I'm confident that I won't have any dead spots whatsoever with the open rockwork that I have planned, these powerheads are covering the entire tank (have some debris in the tank and it's not settling anywhere) and I don't even have all four of them running. We'll see how my luck holds out with the Marco Rocks sand...