Jan,
Thanks for the kind words
Honestly the best thing to do is to read, read some more, measure, read, measure again, and then 'dry fit' everything together. Put your skimmer in, pumps where they should go, return/drain tubes, heaters, whatever you got, all inside your sump and then place your baffles around everything.
oh, and really know what you want
Here is what I did and my thought process, I hope it helps you out, and you can learn from it!
I tried to make sure that I knew what I wanted, and even after planning I skipped a few areas!
I knew I wanted to make sure whatever microbubbles came from my drain and skimmer were all cleared out, leaving me with cleaner looking display. I made a baffle system for that, which is about a half inch off the floor of the sump, and this allows water to flow under it. By doing that, the microbubbles have to go deeper than they really want to go, and end up just hanging around the top until they pop.
the water then hits the first wall of the fuge chamber, about an inch down stream from the first baffle and flows up, and then over the lip, which is about a half inch drop as I mentioned earlier in the thread. In hind sight, I would make this a .75in drop. The drop by the way is determined by the next chamber. This little drop gives a small level of aeration, but nothing near what the surface of the display tank will offer, according to more experienced individuals
Also, I guess it adds a little surface skimming to the mix, since the water is 'sheeting' over that little drop, but there is no where near the amount of surface area in this little sump to compare to the gigantic overflow in the display.
So after the water mixes up in the fuge, it hits the wall of the return pump chamber, or the last wall in the fuge, same thing
I mentioned above this wall is what determines the water level in the fuge. Each chamber determines the water level of the one before it, since this is where the water is actually dropping off from one chamber to the next.
The pump area holds enough water to cover the pump about half way up the baffle, and I leave the rest of the room for overflow from the drain pipe, the stand tube and actual overflow chamber of the tank, because I didn’t seal up the stand pipe setup to the bulkheads
(who cares they are under water anyway!) Currently all of this water only raises the water level of the whole tank to just under mouth of the skimmer if the power were to go out, and no spills on the carpet!
I based the height of the baffles on the height of my skimmer output, and decided to keep the water level about .5in below the mouth of the skimmer, that turned out to be 11.5in. In my previous post that matches up to the height of the first wall of the fuge, or the SECOND baffle. Remember, the first one was raised a half inch off the floor so water could pass under it, after loosing its microbubbles.
As far as -where- to put the baffles in the tank, that’s up to you and your equipment, how much it flows, and how much room you have to start with. I would really read up on this part, to make sure you have enough flow and room for all your stuff. When you do figure that out though, just seal it up real good with a few tubes of aquarium safe epoxy (got it at home depot with the acrylic baffles) and let it cure for a few days. Don’t worry too much about getting glue all over the glass (if you use glass) you can scrape it all off with a razor, yes even fingerprints and the oily smear that never goes away. If you are using acrylic though, be real careful not to get it in areas you don’t want it, if you care about looks that is. Its much harder to get the small thin layer stuff with a razor on acrylic.
After it cures, fill it up and test it! Fill up the overflow and as water empties from chamber to chamber you get this really neat feeling like you have accomplished something great! After that subsides (and it will as soon as you realize your bulkhead is gushing water on the floor) turn the pump on and gauge how fast it is draining its own chamber. You can throttle it with a ball valve like I did, but I am thinking of trying a gate valve since I might have a little too much flow, as indicated earlier.
(I bought a kit off eBay where you're able to put it together any way you want...)
Do you have any pictures? Can I check out what you got to build with? I was looking at some kits online but nothing really fit the tank I had.
I used:
2 18x36 acrylic sheets (forget the size but it is thin) <-too much but this was all they had
2 tubes of aquarium safe epoxy
and my dremel tool to cut it up
About $35, but it could have been cheaper if the acrylic came in smaller sheets.
Good reading:
http://reefcentral.com/calc/
http://www.reeffrontiers.com/forums/search.php?searchid=295532
http://www.reeffrontiers.com/forums/showthread.php?t=22393&highlight=sump
http://reefcentral.com/diy/?menu=12
<-thanks davidabrown66!
Look another long winded post. Is this the 'reef bug' everyone seems to be saying they got bit by?