seattlereef
Well-known member
I’ve sold my old house and bought a new one. I thought I would give a summary of my old system that I’ll be taking apart and will be updating the thread with a the story for my new build that I’m working with Tim at Barrier Reef on.
The Story
The tank was started about 4 years ago and was my first time running a Marine setup. Instead of going small and upgrading over time I decided to go with Med/Large and go for broke. I utilized a lot of advice from the LFS, Reef Frontiers and Reef Central. This thread is an attempt to give back to the community by talking about what went well for me and some lessons learned.
The Display
My old tank was built by CFI and was 60x25x24 Acrylic around 150 gallons. I had the existing cabinets modified to accommodate the tank and then penetrated the garage wall where all the filtration was. Overall been happy with this but you do get scratches on acrylic and with Acrylic yes you can in theory buff it out but I never did. I thought I was being pretty careful not allowing anyone but myself to clean it but scratches happen. It was never so bad that anyone but me really noticed but my next build will be glass. Which I know is harder but if you get a scratch is permanent but given I never sanded/buffed out will probably be about the same to me.
The Lighting
I started with 3 cheapo Chinese LED specials to start. One of the lights failed after about 6 months and decided to get an Eotech Gen 1 Radion. After running with this for another 6 months I decided to buy 2 additional Radion’s and at the time Gen 2 was the hotness and swap out the cheap ones. I’ve been running this since and have had no problems and even picked up a Reeflink. The reeflink is very much a nice to have. I hardly ever use it to modify things on the fly but its great for when I want to program a new schedule. In retrospect not sure it was worth the premium to have wireless control of the lights.
The Garage aka Fish Room
I decided to put all the life support in the garage for a couple of reasons. Number 1 wanted to isolate the noise from the main living area. Secondarily thought it would make WC etc. easier. Doing this is by far the best decision I made. By having this in the garage I didn’t have to worry about making a mess during water changes, gave me plenty of room to tinker and allowed me to make a mess in an acceptable portion of the house and gave me plenty of room to expand. I seriously doubt I would have kept with the hobby without that and I know my wife would not have allowed me to keep it. Also allowed me to make additions such as ozone, calcium reactor, both carbon and gfo reactors, AWC via Neptune DOS. I really have no idea how you would get all of this under a tank.
I built a two tier stand with some lumber and utilized a pair of 55 gallon tanks that I got from the $1 per gallon Petco sales. I also insulated the stand with some rigid insulation for the winter.
Here is the upper
Here I originally wanted to setup an Algae Turf scrubber on the left side and on the right side a refugium. In the end I took down the algae turf scrubber because it never worked the way I wanted and was causing quite a bit of salt creep. I ended up putting a power head in the right section to tumble cheato and dragons breath algae.
Here is the lower
Here is the lower sump which contains the filter sock, skimmer, pumps, ATO and kalkwasser reactor
Low Lights
Took me awhile to learn this lessons but Quarantine is a must. Bypassing this has caused ICK, more ICK, flatworm infestation, Monti eating montiporia. In addition my survival rate of corals/inverts and fish has gone from 10-20% to 80-90%. A side effect of always QT any additions it has slowed my roll which has allowed me to gradually increase bio load which I believe has greatly increased the stability of my system. I know that some people say it will stress the animals out but if you’re keeping them there for a min of 30 days that’s enough time to allow any stress to pass and if they are not nice and fat in the QT with little to no competition for food they won’t get there in the display. I know you always want to have your newest addition in the main tank but you are doing yourself and the animals that you are keeping a disservice by not doing this.
While I was enjoying the wonderful sun and breeze in Kauai my home suffered a power outage. I had a neighbor checking on the tank and they let me know that it was out but told them to not worry about it unless it wasn’t back on in the morning. Well in the morning the power was back on but 90% of my livestock was gone. Despite having a generator by not having instructions on how to get everything going without me it did me no good.
Key Lessons For me to carry forward:
The Story
The tank was started about 4 years ago and was my first time running a Marine setup. Instead of going small and upgrading over time I decided to go with Med/Large and go for broke. I utilized a lot of advice from the LFS, Reef Frontiers and Reef Central. This thread is an attempt to give back to the community by talking about what went well for me and some lessons learned.
The Display
My old tank was built by CFI and was 60x25x24 Acrylic around 150 gallons. I had the existing cabinets modified to accommodate the tank and then penetrated the garage wall where all the filtration was. Overall been happy with this but you do get scratches on acrylic and with Acrylic yes you can in theory buff it out but I never did. I thought I was being pretty careful not allowing anyone but myself to clean it but scratches happen. It was never so bad that anyone but me really noticed but my next build will be glass. Which I know is harder but if you get a scratch is permanent but given I never sanded/buffed out will probably be about the same to me.
The Lighting
I started with 3 cheapo Chinese LED specials to start. One of the lights failed after about 6 months and decided to get an Eotech Gen 1 Radion. After running with this for another 6 months I decided to buy 2 additional Radion’s and at the time Gen 2 was the hotness and swap out the cheap ones. I’ve been running this since and have had no problems and even picked up a Reeflink. The reeflink is very much a nice to have. I hardly ever use it to modify things on the fly but its great for when I want to program a new schedule. In retrospect not sure it was worth the premium to have wireless control of the lights.
The Garage aka Fish Room
I decided to put all the life support in the garage for a couple of reasons. Number 1 wanted to isolate the noise from the main living area. Secondarily thought it would make WC etc. easier. Doing this is by far the best decision I made. By having this in the garage I didn’t have to worry about making a mess during water changes, gave me plenty of room to tinker and allowed me to make a mess in an acceptable portion of the house and gave me plenty of room to expand. I seriously doubt I would have kept with the hobby without that and I know my wife would not have allowed me to keep it. Also allowed me to make additions such as ozone, calcium reactor, both carbon and gfo reactors, AWC via Neptune DOS. I really have no idea how you would get all of this under a tank.
I built a two tier stand with some lumber and utilized a pair of 55 gallon tanks that I got from the $1 per gallon Petco sales. I also insulated the stand with some rigid insulation for the winter.
Here is the upper
Here I originally wanted to setup an Algae Turf scrubber on the left side and on the right side a refugium. In the end I took down the algae turf scrubber because it never worked the way I wanted and was causing quite a bit of salt creep. I ended up putting a power head in the right section to tumble cheato and dragons breath algae.
Here is the lower
Here is the lower sump which contains the filter sock, skimmer, pumps, ATO and kalkwasser reactor
Low Lights
Took me awhile to learn this lessons but Quarantine is a must. Bypassing this has caused ICK, more ICK, flatworm infestation, Monti eating montiporia. In addition my survival rate of corals/inverts and fish has gone from 10-20% to 80-90%. A side effect of always QT any additions it has slowed my roll which has allowed me to gradually increase bio load which I believe has greatly increased the stability of my system. I know that some people say it will stress the animals out but if you’re keeping them there for a min of 30 days that’s enough time to allow any stress to pass and if they are not nice and fat in the QT with little to no competition for food they won’t get there in the display. I know you always want to have your newest addition in the main tank but you are doing yourself and the animals that you are keeping a disservice by not doing this.
While I was enjoying the wonderful sun and breeze in Kauai my home suffered a power outage. I had a neighbor checking on the tank and they let me know that it was out but told them to not worry about it unless it wasn’t back on in the morning. Well in the morning the power was back on but 90% of my livestock was gone. Despite having a generator by not having instructions on how to get everything going without me it did me no good.
Key Lessons For me to carry forward:
- NOTHING good goes fast, NOTHING.
- Having filtration being remote is the best possible thing for me. Allowed me to experiment and identify equipment / strategies that worked for me
- Loved having a Neptune APEX for automation
- LED lighting all day all the time
- Love AWC via DOS, since I’ve done this my stability has gone up and my time spent on maintaince has gone down.
- A generator is a must. And having someone who can hook it up when your on vacation too.