Jump to content

nanolong

BB Participant
  • Posts

    50
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by nanolong

  1. Thank you to everyone for the responses! I've attached a few photos of the overflow box and return with the valve. I inserted the white crate box as a way to put filter floss in the overflow to reduce the noise but it didn't work. Adjusting the flow higher and lower hasn't done anything to change to noise volume either. 

  2. Does anyone know how I can silence this overflow? It is extremely loud. The sound is coming from the water dripping from the skimmer box. I've tried everything to get the water level to raise in the black overflow box but have been unsuccessful. 

     

    61hfjZ1+vjL._AC_SL1500_.jpg

  3. Added some more rock and a few corals. Have a strawberry basslet that needs a new home. When I added two peppermint shrimp the basslet started to attack both the shrimp. Also, added two H ygger wave makers that are facing each other in the front of the display and a Jebao dosing pump that is dosing Kent's two part in the mornings. The chaeto seems to be growing well which was surprising to me since I just threw it in there before the tank even cycled. 

    20210519_210032.jpg

    20210519_210043.jpg

    20210519_210052.jpg

    20210519_210058.jpg

  4. On 4/10/2021 at 10:27 AM, YHSublime said:


    Got it, function following form, or form following function.

    What you’re seeing on scorcheds tank is small, you’re talking about 30+ gallons more. Wheresthereef had some good ideas about what u think you’re trying to do?

    I’d personally reconsider the external overflow box. As you can see in my photo, I personally don’t believe it would be any more intrusive if you’re going to run piping down the side. The box pictured on my tank would also work on your side tank.

    Another alternative is to not drill at all. You could get a HOB skimmer.

    I know these are not options you’re considering, but it’s the safest way with the least amount of risk, imo.

    I tried to incorporate Scorched's tank idea and agree that it is risky business. I'll probably run YHSublime's tank model when I upgrade to the Mr Aqua tank down the road. 

  5. Did some rock scaping and got the refugium and chaeto going. Does anyone think I really need a filter sock with a skimmer and refugium? ATO bucket is on the side to top of with RO/DI water. 

    20210428_133544.jpg

    20210428_133516.jpg

    20210428_133529.jpg

  6. On 4/27/2021 at 1:34 PM, AlanM said:

     

    Normally there's a valve at the bottom of the full siphon that lets you adjust how quickly it drains.  The larger cross section of the larger bulkhead and pipe lessens the chances of that getting clogged up with stuff over time.

    Well, that makes perfect sense. I'm kicking myself now for not going bigger. 

  7. 12 hours ago, YHSublime said:

     

    I'm speaking from an aesthetic standpoint on both of those things. 

     

     

    Best practice to have larger drains. Reduces the chances of an overflow, less likely to clog. You can always control your return speed. 

     

    You're not leaving yourself a really tight margin for error with 1/2", like Alan was saying. 

    I'll move up to 1" if you think it's best. Have a recommendation for black tubing? 

  8. 12 hours ago, AlanM said:

    Why do you think the larger drain equals higher flow? 

     

    The flow is determined by what the return pump is pushing out of the sump, not by the size of the drain.

    I just assumed a full siphon would have a set flow rate and you match the return with that rate.

  9. 25 minutes ago, YHSublime said:

     

    Standard is 1" drain, 3/4" return. Scorched's tank is awesome, and the only difference is he runs a drain AND a return on either end. The 12 gallon nano was part of the motivation of my DT which is a 22 gallon Mr. Aqua. 

     

     

    No, you do know what you're talking about. They are completely open bulkheads, but the OP purchased these to screw into the inside portion as a strainer.

    image.png.96d53505f2399c61f3dbdb97ba7caa61.png

    The OP has the drains on the left side on different levels, one full siphon, and the other higher up. What Scorched did instead was a drain and return bulkhead on either side, but modified one of the above 'strainers' pictured to cover up a 3/4 portion of it, and kept the other one as is. That way he had a trickle over and a full siphon. While this setup leaves the tank running quiet, if either of them got clogged, it would definitely start making some noise. 

     

    I chose not to run that way because I personally think that nowadays there are more fail safe alternatives. While the margin for error is still very low, exists with a greater probability than, lets say an external overflow box. 

     

    @nanolong I can't see how your return is drilled (middle, side, etc) but it's not to late to go with 1" drains, or 1" drains one either side with a 3/4" return like Scorched, or just take your drains up to 1" on the one side as well would be better than 1/2".  

     

    Couple small things that I would consider, I imagine you liked Scorched's tank for the same reasons we all do, because it's super clean and is superfly. 

    - I'd lose the locline for the return (that's if the sump can handle it if you lose power)

    - I'd find a way to get the plumbing off the sides (drains and return) to go straight down. If you used PVC you're putting stress on the bulkheads and the glass. If you used plastic tubing, then it's just an aesthetic thing. 

     

     

    I guess I don't understand the advantage of the 1" PVC. That would be a flow rate of 600GPH so the tank would be turning over 30x an hour. That seems like chaos to me, but I'm still new at this. First time drilling and creating a custom tank. 

  10. 19 minutes ago, YHSublime said:

     

    Standard is 1" drain, 3/4" return. Scorched's tank is awesome, and the only difference is he runs a drain AND a return on either end. The 12 gallon nano was part of the motivation of my DT which is a 22 gallon Mr. Aqua. 

     

     

    No, you do know what you're talking about. They are completely open bulkheads, but the OP purchased these to screw into the inside portion as a strainer.

    image.png.96d53505f2399c61f3dbdb97ba7caa61.png

    The OP has the drains on the left side on different levels, one full siphon, and the other higher up. What Scorched did instead was a drain and return bulkhead on either side, but modified one of the above 'strainers' pictured to cover up a 3/4 portion of it, and kept the other one as is. That way he had a trickle over and a full siphon. While this setup leaves the tank running quiet, if either of them got clogged, it would definitely start making some noise. 

     

    I chose not to run that way because I personally think that nowadays there are more fail safe alternatives. While the margin for error is still very low, exists with a greater probability than, lets say an external overflow box. 

     

    @nanolong I can't see how your return is drilled (middle, side, etc) but it's not to late to go with 1" drains, or 1" drains one either side with a 3/4" return like Scorched, or just take your drains up to 1" on the one side as well would be better than 1/2".  

     

    Couple small things that I would consider, I imagine you liked Scorched's tank for the same reasons we all do, because it's super clean and is superfly. 

    - I'd lose the locline for the return (that's if the sump can handle it if you lose power)

    - I'd find a way to get the plumbing off the sides (drains and return) to go straight down. If you used PVC you're putting stress on the bulkheads and the glass. If you used plastic tubing, then it's just an aesthetic thing. 

     

     

    I could take the return off and it could be just a straight bulkhead. This is what I added to the return to increase the flow. 

     

    https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B077LHT6GP/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o04_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1 

     

    Interesting on the PVC and stress. I didn't even think of that. The problem is that I custom built the stand to fit the Mr Aqua 22 gallon for whenever I upgrade to that tank which is not as tall but longer. That's why the PVC out of the bulkhead had to stick out further. You think I should go with tubing with the fear of too much stress on the glass? 

  11. On 4/23/2021 at 3:50 PM, AlanM said:

    In my opinion 1/2" drains are really small.  Hope you don't overflow the tank when they plug.

    I was concerned the flow would be too much if I went any larger. What would you have done? I can always go bigger. 

  12. 30 minutes ago, howaboutme said:

    Thank you. Can you explain what happens when you turn the return pump off? Your sump has to be able to hold the volume of water from the top drain to just below the bottom drain? That looks like a lot relative to the sump picture you've shown.

    Yes, the sump can handle the volume that is drained when the return pump is turned off. If I could do it all over again, I probably would have put the lower drain and return drain a little higher to give the sump a little more breathing room. It's cutting it a little too close for comfort at the moment. 

  13. 13 hours ago, howaboutme said:

    Thanks Alan. Just realized I meant drain, not return. I'm curious how the drain works w/ the bulkheads and how the 2 returns work, like a durso? (I don't know what I'm talking about.)

    There is one 1/2" drain on a full siphon and another 1/2" drain a little above acting as a surface skimmer. There are two low profile strainers on the 1/2" bulkheads. Here's a link to what they look like.

     

    https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00BXRETYW/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_glt_fabc_GR2WSBBV5BZSYHKC6NZM?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1

     

     

  14. Hello everyone! I've been out of the hobby for 8 years now and have finally started up another tank. The new tank is inspired by Scorched's Mr Aqua's 12 gallon nano long. There are two 1/2" holes on the left side and a 1/2" return. The goal was to keep the back of the tank as clean as possible. The sump below is a 10 gallon sump (my first sump so still learning). Just thought this may be of interest to some reefers looking at different tank designs. Let me know if you have any ideas! 

     

    20210422_103331.jpg.55f3f57ba4925c6ec988ba2cbdd7a1f0.jpg

    20210422_110239.jpg.f3be32bd8ade57967237d32fa5c29e98.jpg

    20210422_110230.jpg

×
×
  • Create New...