Canreef Aquatics Bulletin Board

Canreef Aquatics Bulletin Board (http://www.canreef.com/vbulletin/index.php)
-   Reef (http://www.canreef.com/vbulletin/forumdisplay.php?f=8)
-   -   1350 Gallon Reef (http://www.canreef.com/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=77615)

mr.wilson 08-11-2011 03:50 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Hydrologist (Post 628985)
Mr. Wilson,

Where did you purchase the water storage tanks? Looking for a few myself.

Thanks,
Dave

They came with the place. Shipping cost is a problem with large storage tanks, so you are limited to local sources. I find farm supply businesses to be the most reasonable. Try TSC if they have it out your way.

mr.wilson 08-11-2011 04:00 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by KPG007 (Post 629008)
Wow, this build is one of my favorites on RC. The detail, not only to design and construction, but also to documenting has been outstanding!

A couple of questions - What problems have you run into now that the system is up and running? How do you control pest algae and fish disease in the main tank? What problems have you noticed with the fish community? What's the maintainance like on this system (you mentioned you're there 3 days a week - any others helping out)?

Kelly

We had bad algae plagues for the first three months, just about everything. A variety of snails and royal conchs did the trick. I also used Kent Tech M magnesium.

We haven't had any fish disease issues to speak of, other than a few one-offs. We lost all of our elegant corals to a common bacterial infection/plague. We will wait awhile before trying any more.

No climate control problems or leaks. We have had some flatworms in the mangrove wall, but killed them off with flat worm exit (Levamisole). We also had a montipora with nudibranchs, and a zoanthid with zoanthid snails, but physical removal was enough.

Cleaning the acrylic isn't my favourite job, but someone has to do it. Rinsing the filter bags and water test rank closely behind. I'm really good at looking at the tank though, and I have no problem talking about what I'm going to do next :)

mr.wilson 08-11-2011 04:06 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by KevinK (Post 629015)
Mr Wilson,

what substrate is there in the main tank, and how thick,

it seems very course and as far as my understanding goes' thy always say course material will trap a lot of debris.-- what's the background on this ?

I also se there is a DSB in the refugium what's the grade there

thanks

We started off with a mixed grade and scraped the small stuff we had initially. The fine stuff gets swept up into the cleaning magnets too easily. The surge in flow moves some sand around, so we add course (grape size) aragonite where the sand tends to shift.

I like course substrate because it turns pink with coraline algae and provides good tunneling for gobies and jawfish. It also provides better homes for zooplankton. Fine sand simply cannot support large colonies of copepods and amphipods.

We used regular fine sand in the refugium because it was more for bacteria and we needed to use it somewhere. I like the look of mixed sand with shells. The regular stuff is too homogenous and looks like cat litter :)

mr.wilson 08-11-2011 04:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by lastlight (Post 629031)
I remember thinking when he first started this build that it seemed crazy to have no budget restraints and still limit yourself to 3 feet across. You guys have done an amazing job though it looks fantastic!

I recall reading that Peter was sourcing premium stuff and not really starting with frags so it's hard to tell how growth has been. Have you seen a lot of growth under the Orpheks?

Actually, frags are premium, we have been buying maricultured pieces from tangerine to grapefruit size. They come in washed out and we do what we can to colour them up.

Don't even bring up the 3' across thing :) It drives us all crazy that it isn't 4-5'. That ship had sailed before I came on the scene, and Chingchai had warner him too... well, next tank :)

Growth has been really good, especially in the past month. A colour improvement was the main difference we saw. I will dig through my pics and try to find some before and after with dates, but give me some time. The staghorns are the fastest growing, with montipora & millipora not far behind.

mr.wilson 08-11-2011 04:15 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by fishoholic (Post 629029)
Cool, I was born Oakville :mrgreen:

I have to say that is an amazing set up, if I ever had the money I'd definately want something just like that :thumb: Thank-you for sharing :biggrin:

You never know, the tank may still be there when it's your turn to retire and move back to Oakville :)

mr.wilson 08-11-2011 04:18 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by abcha0s@conceptaquatics (Post 629039)
Thank you for creating this thread. I've followed the thread on RC, but as you suggest - it is very large. I'm especially looking forward to your commentary of the ReefTech lighting system.

You mentioned on RC that you were planning a book. Is this still in the works?

I'll be traveling to Toronto in October. I can PM you the dates. If there is any chance of chatting with you and Peter, it would be the highlight of my trip.

- Brad

By all means, we enjoy sharing the tank with friends. No time for books now, but I'm writing at least :)

mr.wilson 08-11-2011 04:21 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by fishytime (Post 629060)
I skimmed through this whole thread again and I didnt see it anywhere.....what are the dimensions on this bad boy?

I noticed in the picture of beneath the tank that it looks like there was a small concrete "footing" for the cross braces on the stand? .....looks like its starting to crumble if thats what Im seeing???

Try skimming the RC thread :) It's 16' long on the long side, and 8' long on the "short" side x 36" wide x 30" high. If it was a public display, I would have gone 36" high for impact, but the aquascaping and coral placing would suffer.

No crumbling, the cement was just packed by hand and not formed. The tank wasn't properly leveled, so it is off in all corners. As a result, the overflow at th elong end does most of the draining (70%). I intend to raise the lower overflow teeth with a strip of acrylic... some day. The teeth are too big as well. I think ATM designed it like their usual fish only tanks.

mr.wilson 08-11-2011 04:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Delphinus (Post 629055)
I love the look of this tank. It's a good thing it's a private tank, if this tank were somewhere publicly accessible in my own city for example, I'd no longer feel the need to have a tank of my own. :)

Very enviable setup..

Yes, I certainly don't need my own tank now.

Reefie 08-11-2011 08:45 AM

I am in utter AWE!!! Words cannot even begin to describe the beauty of this tank and the build! This tank is a reefer's dream come true! One day...............one day..............Excuse me I have to go buy some Lottery Tix now. Mr. Wilson thank you for sharing this and inspiring us reef-addicts.

HaZRaTTy 08-11-2011 08:08 PM

The Mangrove filtration is KILLER!

Jaw Dropping !


All times are GMT. The time now is 06:15 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.3
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.