By the time we got everything to the new house, it was late...around 11pm or so. Everyone unloaded the vans and the reassemble began. Everything seemed to be going very well, and the plumbing seemed to piece together perfectly. I was given the task of running the new water for the tank through a filter (aka brine shrimp net), to make sure there wasn't any type of particulate in the water from the storage containers. Yes, it was late...I'd say around 1am.....I started falling asleep doing my job :lol:. Thankfully, no one took a picture
. Then, there was a glitch with the plumbing, which Nick figured out later. I was too tired to pay attention to what pump it was...I think it was the chiller. Anyway, the water was too cool to put the livestock in, and the heaters were left back at the other house. So, by the time Nick went to get the heaters, returned back to the new house, and finished getting the tank put together, it was going on 3:30 am. The heaters were placed in each bin, along with powerheads, and stock from bin #4 was added to the other bins.
In the morning, Nick began to add the livestock back to the tank. This is where bin #3 became a glitch. The heater in bin #3 stuck on overnight. When Nick put his hand in to transfer the livestock, he knew it was too warm. When I felt the water, it was very warm....I guessed over 90F. Well, I stuck the thermometer in there, and it registered at 96F! The smell of sick SPS was just getting into the air. Nick had to get ready for work, so we finished up what we could. Later in the morning, when we all (minus the working Nick) got back from breakfast, I went ahead and stuck everything from that bin in the tank. The corals in there were almost all gone. Such a bummer.
Here are the pics from the set-up. This is not the finished product. Nick will have to reaquascape, but it was the best he could do at the time. When I added the liverock from bin#3 I had to move all the corals around so the liverock would set in. Hopefully, when the tank is back up fully, Nick will repost new pics.
In the last pic, you can see the bleached out corals on the right side of the tank. These were the ones that were cooked. Everything else seemed to be fine from the trip.