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What doesn't exist for reefing yet but you really, really wish it did?
Exactly as it say on the box:
What doesn't exist for reefing yet but you really, really wish it did? Why do I ask? I'm right at the end of my PhD in Engineering and so I will be working less and less with super high tech stuff on a daily basis... and I'm going to be getting antsy as all heck! While I have a few development projects on the go (super high resolution 3D printer, bike accessories, a few consumer electronic devices, etc), I am looking for cool ideas to work on as I burn through projects pretty quick. It could be something everyone would want or something very specific to you, doesn't matter. If it catches my fancy or there is enough demand for it here on CanReef, I'll invent it and built it. I have a full machine shop and prototyping lab at home, so I can build everything from car parts to electronics to nano materials. Don't worry if something can or can't be done - provided it exists within the laws of physics, I can find a way to make it happen. But please, no intentionally stupid ideas! (i.e. no "Boaty McBoatface" or equivalent) Bring forth your wishes, my salty friends! Oh, and I'm happy to say I'm back here on CanReef after a long absence! :biggrin: |
I robot for the glass
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Programmable nanites that can target algaes and unwanted pests.
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I cant think of anything but can you be my new dad , and can I live in your garage , I don't eat much . Seriously , do you need a 30 year old son?
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A truly DEAD SILENT pump.
I have never come across one no matter what they advertise. Right now I have an Aqua Clear 110 that started out somewhat quiet but now it is grinding away and I can't seem to do anything to quiet it down. AquaAddict |
A reef safe effective cure for ich and velvet.
Something to DECIMATE bubble algae. |
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Monitors
I think if we had a probe/monitor that constantly shows the Calcium/Alkalinity/phosphate levels in your aquarium at all times without doing individual test, like a temperature or PH probe which are currently available, that would help the hobby immensely.
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A rare earth magnet no more than a 1/4 inch thick sealed with a super hard plastic that can be used like a magfloat to remove coraline in very tight spots.
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Something that would allow safely moving a full tank.
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A nano tank 5 -10 gallons display (eg zero reef coral)with a underneath sump, refill, dump water area...water dumbos 70% or so into a 5 gallon bucket so it is humanly possible to lift up and dump. Mixed new water refills at a switch. Water change is a real pain and with the world only going smaller condos, no one can buy 150 gallon tanks and fit it all in a hectic lifestyle.
Ps... you know xreefer iminsky runs tinkerine.com |
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I second that |
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There is something like that out there already , hopefully they release it soon. https://reefbuilders.com/2015/07/27/...e-kickstarter/ |
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I think the idea is cool but at 7-900 up front and 500 a year for discs @ the discounted pricing which im sure are both in USD. It's not a realistic purchase for a lot of people where a $50-70 probe that lasts any length of time I'd buy them for sure. |
An auto feeder that dispenses frozen food. I've seen a few interesting DIY jobs involving mini fridges but nothing even remotely compact.
Plasma lighting in the 14K spectrum. I'll put my hand up too for the Alkalinity monitor. |
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The kicker with these units though is that to get accurate measurements they sometimes need to be paired with a pH probe. The potential (i.e. voltage) of an electrode shifts 0.059V per decade (meaning one pH unit, such as if the pH shifts from 7 to 8). Doesn't sound like much but once that error gets factored in, your measurement could swing wildly with pH shifts throughout the day, talk additions, etc. So, it can be done but it hit always going to be cheap. |
second the frozen food feeder
an adjustable sump system where you can increase or decrease size of the chambers with sliders so you can add or remove equipment and make space accordingly |
A fitration system that takes in your dirty tank water and spits out water as clean as the day you made it. The filter would remove all bad items but leave the salt and all trace elements. A true sea water purification system that is easy to use.
It would remove all algae, nitrate, phosphate, pests (ich) and just return water that only had the good stuff left in it. |
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But yeah, if you could live monitor or even hourly monitor cal and alk even just those two would be immensely helpful. |
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Mindstream claims to have it figured out, but they are lacking funding badly since a serious failure in their Kickstarter program. |
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I was doing some reading tonight and it seems it should be fairly straight forward to make a carbonate selective electrode (provided I can synthesize a molecular tweezer :lol:). In fact, I think I could put pH, Calc, Alk and Nitrate all on the same electrode. |
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What kind of precision would people want for calc/alk measurements? Most test kits only give you 5% precision (i.e. 400 ppm ± 20 ppm), Elos is a bit better around 2.5%. Is that good enough? Is there a need or want to go better than that?
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100% effective aiptasia remover.
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I think I have unresolved tension with aptasia... |
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I'm diabetic and blood glucose monitors have come a very long way since the very first, paperback-sized one I had 35 years ago. Now they read the blood drop itself, where back then it was spectral analysis of the reactant strip. Of course they are also much smaller now but that would be a lesser consideration for me personally when it came to a saltwater parameter measurement device. The glucose monitor I have now is an accuchek compact, which uses a pre-loaded barrel of 17 tests - the "test strips" basically function like flat pipettes that draw the blood into a transparent chamber for the optical reader to scan. I've often wondered if this principle could be applied to testing saltwater parameters of various types. The "test strips" cost about $1 each at retail, however they don't have any chemical or electronic function, purely mechanical - and of course they are the way the meter companies make their money because the meters are free to diabetics. I'd pay good money for something that measures salt water, which for me would be up to $200 if ongoing expenses for stuff like calibration were very low or non-existent. If there were significant ongoing expenses, my limit would be maybe $150 because of the time a single device would save. This has been a big hmmmmmm...... in my mind for a while now. I picture something that would read an entire spectrum and output levels of each parameter, perhaps to an app of some type. Well, we are blue-skying, right? :biggrin: Sorry for the long post - I don't know if this is any help. :neutral: |
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