Hello all,
first id like to say great forum, very informative and interesting stuff
I've been reading about horizontal overflows and was thinking of maybe doing an external one. i saw a post discussion on slotting the back wall of your tank to be lower and create an external overflow, of course this is a technically challenging project. but i thought of 2 alternatives and wanted to see what you guys thought:
1. (this can only be done if your custom building your tank) have the back wall cut an inch shorter then the side and front glass, thus eliminating any corners and uneven stress, ( i think, i am not an engineer)
2. instead of making the back wall lower, make the sides and front a bit higher with some thin horizontal stripes of glass or acrylic, rendering the back wall relatively lower and producing the same effect. (can be used on existing tanks without risk of altering them - worse case the rim breaks)
what do you think? personally i prefer option 1 since i will have my new tank custom built, can anyone think of why its not good to do it this way?
oh and also id like to now if these kind of overflows can be tweaked to be virtually silent (i read posts about how to minimize noise but i cant find info on how silent you can actually get these to work).
another idea was what if instead of plumbing the back of the tank to pipes i would turn the external into a hybrid funnel-overflow box that would extend the bottom of the external box in a funnel like fashion all the way down to the sump.
why? ive seen pics of many externals and all of them require the tank to be spaced fairly well from the wall (due to piping and elbows). but this way you can custom build it super thin and only use pipes down in the sump area (i dont think even that it will be load since this system will be thin water level should stay high without air getting sucked in (just going on instinct here).
ok i think thats enough for question for my 1st post
Thanks in advance for any comments and/or feedback you guys care to share
first id like to say great forum, very informative and interesting stuff
I've been reading about horizontal overflows and was thinking of maybe doing an external one. i saw a post discussion on slotting the back wall of your tank to be lower and create an external overflow, of course this is a technically challenging project. but i thought of 2 alternatives and wanted to see what you guys thought:
1. (this can only be done if your custom building your tank) have the back wall cut an inch shorter then the side and front glass, thus eliminating any corners and uneven stress, ( i think, i am not an engineer)
2. instead of making the back wall lower, make the sides and front a bit higher with some thin horizontal stripes of glass or acrylic, rendering the back wall relatively lower and producing the same effect. (can be used on existing tanks without risk of altering them - worse case the rim breaks)
what do you think? personally i prefer option 1 since i will have my new tank custom built, can anyone think of why its not good to do it this way?
oh and also id like to now if these kind of overflows can be tweaked to be virtually silent (i read posts about how to minimize noise but i cant find info on how silent you can actually get these to work).
another idea was what if instead of plumbing the back of the tank to pipes i would turn the external into a hybrid funnel-overflow box that would extend the bottom of the external box in a funnel like fashion all the way down to the sump.
why? ive seen pics of many externals and all of them require the tank to be spaced fairly well from the wall (due to piping and elbows). but this way you can custom build it super thin and only use pipes down in the sump area (i dont think even that it will be load since this system will be thin water level should stay high without air getting sucked in (just going on instinct here).
ok i think thats enough for question for my 1st post
Thanks in advance for any comments and/or feedback you guys care to share
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