Jump to content

Rosco's Reefs

BB Participant
  • Posts

    693
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Rosco's Reefs

  1. As long as you have good gravity flows from all your returns this will probably work. I tried something like this with pumps and float valves and I kept dumping water all over the floor. I just could not get it synchronized. Good luck!

  2. You can use pvc with elbows to raise the returns in the tank 3 short straights + 2 90s use heat on tip of 3rd straight to flatten. Drill a small angle hole in pipe near the surface. This will break siphon during power outage.

     

    This would be my recommendation but I have to say these almost don't look like returns but instead almost like those "sea-swirl" or closed-loop type water movers. Just a thought. You could also throw a couple of bulkheads on there and cap the holes and install another return higher up.

  3. I use the Reef Angel as well and have yet to find something it cannot do. As stated by the member above you will be more successful if willing to tinker with it and follow the examples on the forum. I'd be happy for you to come to Gaithersburg and see what I am doing with RA. Although I have been in IT my whole career I have never written an independent line of code, everything has been cut, copy, and paste. You will need a close-by computer or a very long USB cable.

     

    I am supporting three tanks, a saltwater mixing station, multiple ph controllers, saltwater monitors, adding dosing, float valves, etc. I am sure other controllers on the market will do these things but I loved the programming and DYI aspect of it.

  4. Reef Angel does have a Conductivity module ( a salinity probe) and some of us are using it both to monitor salinity as well as determine whether to pull top off water from the RODI unit or from the fresh salt water bucket. Because controller preferences are like opinions, everyone has one, I'm sure the other models will do this as well. If anyone want s to see what I'm doing with RA, let me know. Thx

     

    Ross

  5. Need some advice please. I am cutting both thick and thin plexiglass for DIY projects. I currently use a "scoring tool" to mark the glass until I can pop it and it breaks cleanly. I bought a jig saw for other reasons besides this but wondered if I could use this saw on this glass. When I tried it, glass vibrated so badly I must've had the wrong blade. What advice can you give me, maybe a diffferent blade type..different plan?

     

    Thx in advance.

     

    Ross

  6. Got two bt anemones recently, one large, one small. Lost the small one for weeks, thought he'd perished, but found him today in my sump, stuck on one of the overflow pipes. My question is this, can he survive down there with no lights other than ambient room light? Should I move him back to my DT, and if yes, how. Thx to all in advance.

     

    Ross

  7. A friend is emptying a crashed 300g 6ft bowfront acrylic tank (30 in tall.) His tank has the small holes cut in the top for access, rather than being open. What ideas or tools have you guys used to remove old sand, gravel, etc. from situations like this? We intend to clean it out as completely as possible and then rebuild it from the ground up. Thx in advance.

     

    Ross

  8. In my mind your first efforts are to get water pumping and a cycle started. To do that you need sumps, pumps, and overflows. I use a 40 breeder for my sump, should have done baffles but didn't, probably switching up to a 75 sump mid year; eheim pumps from BRS, and overflows from glass-holes.com. Many people think the glass-holes.com overflows are loud, there are ways to combat that but are not perfect. I did my own drilling, and I like them, just trying to figure out and deal with the gurgling.

     

    After all that is done you'll have to think about lights. I went cheap, power compact, used t-5's, and have beautiful softies, mushrooms, and some fish; but I can't do hard corals. I want to trade up to LED's, but they are fairly expensive for what I want, so I keep putting it off. I have been a member for 2 years and have always received good advice and great deals from our members.

     

    Welcome, get started,and let us know how it goes.

     

    Roscoe

  9. Funny, I just tested my tropic marin for alkalinity and it was about 8 or 9, so I guess you should try it. I'm tryiing to maintain mine at 11 and its a pain, but I want some coraline growing.

     

    Is this true? Higher alkalinity leads to better coraline growth? Please advise. This fits in with a project I am doing. Thx in advance.

×
×
  • Create New...