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Origami

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Posts posted by Origami

  1. I'll pull the reducers out before I turn the pump back on just in case it does go up a lot.

     

    Aw, just leave 'em in and see how far they shoot :biggrin:

     

     

    Careful what you ask for - the actual flow is going to go up a LOT with 1.5" plumbing, toss in the velocity increase from the 1" outlets......................???

     

    Flow is what you want though. That's why you're installing a closed loop. It's good that you have that ball valve available though to throttle it back some if needed.... Heck, having the headroom at your disposal to increase the flow is probably something desirable on occasion so you can create "storms" when needed to shake things up some.

  2. Just some thoughts. I'm no expert on these matters but maybe something here will prove useful. Rough calculation using Reef Central's head loss calculator on the plumbing both in front of and behind your pump say you're losing on the order of 12.7 (3.9 meters) of head from the plumbing. Now, looking at the pump's performance graph, you see that the manufacturer says you should see about 5 liters/minute of discharge (1.3 gallons per minute). At 231 cubic inches per gallon, that's about 300 cubic inches per minute, or 5 cubic inches per second. Divide that by the total square inches of outflow (4 x 1-inch pipe = 3.14 square inches) and you get a linear flow of 1.6 inches per second out of your outlets (theoretically).

     

    Compare that to a Maxijet 1200 (295 gph out of a 1/2" exit at 0' head loss) that moves water linearly at about 96 in/sec and now you have a comparative reference with your 1270 gph pump. Of course, you probably don't want maxijet velocities out of your returns but it's just a convenient reference.

     

    Upsizing your plumbing to 1.5 inches, according to RC's head loss calculator drops your head loss to about 2.7 feet (a 10-foot improvement!); with 2 inch plumbing, the drop is less than 1-foot of head pressure. I think Dave's right on the mark with the suggestion to upsize your plumbing. Hope this helps.

  3. One 2X4 on end, 24 inches long, will support 19,000+ pounds before it deflects sideways enough to fail. Given what appears to be 30(ish)" it's likely closer to 15,000 pounds - I'd say safe.

     

    Correct me if I'm wrong here, Erik, but the point of failure of the 2x4 is not the same as the point where the system fails. The threshold of system failure would be when the 2x4's deflect enough to cause the tank to fail (break). The tank would fail due to small deflections far earlier than the 2x4's themselves (in which case the 2x4 would never really break, would it?).

     

    Here's the link to the curve for your pump: http://www.panworldamericas.com/PX/60Hz/A3400468.pdf.

     

    It looks like with 10' of loss (due mostly to twists & turns, with no allowance for vertical lift since this is closed loop), you're looking at about 507 gph out. That's about 125 gph from each outlet if equally divided.

  4. You can find aquamend in the adhesives area, typically near the paint department at HD. I sandwich a disk of it between two dollops of super glue (CA) gel before placing it on a frag plug or rock. The epoxy putty forms nicely to the rock shape but doesn't stick very well unless you use the gel or shove it into a hole.

    You might try using the CA gel trick on that stuff you threw out last night.... It might save you $14.

  5. Definitely it was snorkeling and diving over the reefs in Okinawa back in the mid-70's. The colors, shapes, and diversity of life was incredible. Since then, I've always longed to to have my own little corner of the reef. I put off satisfying that dream until my other financial priorities were taken care of (such as paying for the house, paying for the kids' college expenses, etc.). Now that I'm finally there, I'm a bit older (so I guess I'm qualified to play now, eh?).

     

     

     

    On a side note, I had a chance to scuba off those same reefs about a year and a half ago. Definitely impressive, but not anywhere near the same as 30 years ago. Reefs are in decline worldwide.

  6. Newfish, take traveller7's advice to heart. Feed meaty foods about the size of the anemone's mouth (probably about a cm cubed). Shrimp, fish, squid... whatever. You said you were using a turkey baster - that tells me that you may be feeding little stuff and the anemone may be starving. Place a cube of this larger food on the oral disk of the anemone about every other day and watch for a feeding response (the mouth will start to invert and the oral disk or tentacles will draw the food in toward the mouth). If you get a feeding response, continue feeding and look for an improvement in the health of the creature over a couple of weeks. Look for new tentacles growing and flowing. Don't be too concerned if you see the anemone cycle through inflation and deflation as much as a couple of times a day - that can be normal behavior. Good luck and let us know here if you observe a feeding response when you try those meaty chunks.

  7. I need to figure out what to do with my overflow box because I tried connecting one of those tubes directly to the pump and was getting bursts only, because of the air in teh overflow box.... guess I need standpipes now.

     

    Forrest, I'm not sure I'm in sync with your question here, but I use an aqualifter on my overflow box (which is similar to yours, but a CPR clone) to pull the air that gathers at the top of the box (which, as you found can slow flow considerably). I set mine up so that the aqualifter pulls the air out of the fitting at the top of the box and dumps it into the drain-side of the box, just inside the wall there so there's no net water loss in the "tube" and no real risk of the tube draining when the tank water level drops (such as during water changes). It seems to work pretty well.

  8. Hey Josh. Sorry to hear of the loss of your livestock. I've been following your posts for a while now but haven't really had anything to add. I'm kind of new to this myself, you see. I did a lot of reading on the subject about six years ago when I first considered getting into this hobby, but put it off when I felt that I didn't have the time or resources to put into the hobby. Josh, I can see that this incident is weighing on you a bit, and that's good. You seem to have a high level of enthusiasm which has propelled you into rushing things. It's probably good now that you've got something to hold you back and reinforce that things sometimes need to slow down to make things right. Please remember, as you go forward, you own the responsibility of doing your best for the life in your tank. Good luck.

  9. I had a problem with Caulerpa mexicana that came in on my Gulf rock spreading across unabated across my display. At first, like you, I thought it added a nice look. Then it started to spread across everything. In the end, however, I won out. Every few days for over a month, I was in the tank picking at the runners and harvesting handfuls of the stuff using a bamboo skewer to help dislodge the plants. I also had a yellow tang and a coral beauty that picked at the stuff. After about a month, it seemed I had passed a critical point where the Caulerpa regeneration could not stand up to the predation, and finally it died out. Yeah, it did look nice and, yeah, it was useful for nutrient export, but it was just taking over. Overall, though, I'm glad it's gone.

  10. Bob, I've taken several of them out over the last few months. Hitchikers. The largest had a carapace probably about an inch across. Of course, it looked like an absolute monster through the display glass! Only in one case was I able to trap one (a slightly smaller one) by using a small water bottle with the top cut off and placed (inverted) back into the remaining base. The reason is, they are very cautious and stay close to a hole they can retreat into, and are beaten to the bait by a train of hungry hermits. And then, the only reason I was able to trap one using this trap was because I'd tied a string to the lip of the trap so that when one did wander into the trap (while I was watching, of course), a quick pull on the string would right the otherwise horizontal trap to bring my hairy crab friend home.

     

    I've had far more luck using the chop-stick method. This method requires skill, patience, and, at the right moment, speed. You basically keep a chop stick handy and when you spy one of the little buggers, you make a quick move and finish it off. Not elegant but, as I said, more effective than my trap. Good luck with yours.

  11. Also, BG algae (cyanobacteria) can thrive on a number of energy/nutrient sources. Nitrates, phosphates, dissolved organic compounds (DOCs), light.... High phosphates, by the way, is typically indicative of overfeeding. High nitrates could also be the result of overfeeding, an immature biological filter (you did say that your friend's setup is new, right?), bioactivation of some other media such as bioballs, filter media, or filter socks, or an overstocked aquarium.

     

    In addition to your test results, it would be good to post your stocking list, too.

     

    What kind (depth) of sandbed is your friend running? Are they using filter socks? Or a canister filter of some sort? Bioballs in the sump? Are they skimming? What kind of skimmer? Overall flow in the setup?

  12. Next (unless you're adding a CA suppliment) you'll tell tales of not acheiving Ca levels much over 350-370

     

    Not to hijack but, Chip, are you saying that a kalk stirrer can't be expected to get Ca levels much above 350 or is this only on big tanks with a lot of corals?

  13. Many primers already are cleaners. Prime then solvent weld ("glue"). You can get both at Lowe's or Home Depot. Someone in plumbing will be glad to help you.

  14. Removing the bioballs, in the long run, is a good thing. The reason for advising the slow removal is because they provided a large base of aerobic bacteria that converted ammonia to nitrite and nitrite to nitrates. Because of the way they're built, you don't have the anaerobic bacteria population here, however, to break the nitrates down. That's why it all ends up in your water column. Now, when you remove the bioballs quickly, you remove some of your tank's capacity to deal with the ammonia and nitrite loads. While this might stop some of the nitrate production, it also removes some of the capacity to deal with the ammonia and nitrite. The consequence, then, can be an ammonia spike followed by a nitrite spike because the tank's biological filter (live rock and sand) has insufficient capacity (because it was not given the time to build up by removing the bioballs in stages).

     

    Going slow in this hobby is generally good advice. Unless there's a real crisis, it's easy to do more harm than good by making quick changes.

     

    Another thing to note. If your tank water was yellowed, it was probably because you had a buildup of dissolved organic compounds (DOCs) that could be the consequence of overfeeding, overstocking, or inadequate skimming. Carbon is often used to "polish" the water - removing some of these DOCs after skimming. Again, caution is advised, when clarifying yellowed water. If your water was significantly yellowed, then cleaning it up quickly can effectively deliver far more light into your tank than its inhabitants are used to, creating problems in the short term. You may want to consider backing off your photoperiod a bit and increasing it a little each day until you're back to where you want to be.

  15. I suspect it's more likely the electromagnetic field surrounding the fluorescents that's coupling with the TDS meter's circuitry that's giving you the reading. Put the TDS meter up close to an incandescent bulb and you probably won't see the same effect. Strangely, though, my TDS meter doesn't do what you're describing - neither under my PC's or halides. I wonder if it would behave differently if you changed batteries?

  16. Bioballs and your sponge filter are notorious contributors to high nitrates in the water column. Removing them is a good idea but do it in stages so that the biological filtration in your live rock and sand bed can develop to accomodate the extra load. Nitrates and DOCs (dissolved organic compounds) may be behind your cyano bloom. Apparently all new tanks go through it. I'm going through it myself now (hopefully at the tail end of it, too).

  17. My lighting is provided by a Coralife Aqualight Pro which an integrated system (2x 150W HQI MH, 2x 96W Actinic 03, plus 4x lunar LED) that uses HQI ballasts. Insofar as what is it I'd like to know about a comparison between Ushio and XM bulbs, it's this. You have to realize that this is my first time looking into bulbs, so I don't really have much of an idea of what's important and what's not - you know, sifting the wheat from the chaff as it were. The aesthetics of color are important and (what appears to me as) the crisp white of the stock bulbs that were provided by coralife in the fixture, when supplemented by the actinics, seemed pretty nice. PAR value seems to be an important figure of merit as well and I'm making the leap that PAR value is tied to coral growth when all other parameters are held constant. (I'll tell you though, I thought my coral growth rates were kind of slow until just lately when things seem to be almost visibly taking off from day to day, which by the way, is kinda cool to watch.) I'm sure that I'm oversimplifying. Another member here has a some extra Ushios. She's also running some XM bulbs and has offered to let me have a look at her setup to compare the bulbs and I'll probably take her up on it. (Just another example of the generous nature of this WAMAS community!) So, if you could maybe tell me what you think is important to you when evaluating MH replacements, I'm sure that I would benefit. So far, and I hope it's to my benefit, I've clearly decided to stay away from the $8 ebay specials because I haven't a clue of what I'd be getting and I have way too much invested in this hobby to compromise on something as important to the health of the ecosystem as lighting.

  18. You'll find several here who haven't had a problem. I found some recently in my 29g setup and promptly removed them because of stuff I'd read on garf.org, though (in my short exposure to the hobby) I've never seen the problem personally. However, here's a link to another forum thread where the author used to let asterina's live in his system, but regretted it as they started going after his zoas. Pix are included in the thread. http://www.club-zoa.com/forums/showthread.php?t=7213 It appears that some people have a problem and others don't. This author states that they had begun to "overrun" his tank and preying on his zoas. It could be that, below a certain threshold, competition is light enough that preying on other sources such as corals is not required. That's just a guess, though. In any case, it would appear that you're not alone.

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