Quote:
Originally Posted by Bblinks
I think you should drill...
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Myka
I'll hop on the "you should drill" boat too.
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Ok I think at this point it'd just be stubborn of me to not take this advice after so many people have tried to tell me to. I came home last night and just tried to visualize how to redo parts of the plumbing.
I'll be asking around and try to get the tank drilled in the next week.
One of the reasons I didn't want to drill/overflow was that because my tank is not very deep, only 12.5 inches so an overflow inside the tank would take up a lot of room.
I'll be trying to fabricate something like this so that it's less intrusive
I even had thoughts of being super ambitious and try to do the Bean Animal method but I don't think my cabinet has room for another plumbing line to run through it haha
Quote:
Originally Posted by Myka
Ideally, you'd make an overflow in a corner.
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I did not know this, thought the overflow could just be anywhere. Could you explain to me why this is the case?
My reasoning for putting in the middle was that it'd be less likely that snails and whatnot would end up there rather than in a corner.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Myka
Yes, that's a 5-stage. I'd suggest you run it just with the sediment and carbon filters first for 5 gallons or so, then add the RO to it for another 2 gallons (test TDS after the RO while you're at it), then put the DI on and run it for 2 gallons, then test the TDS of the RO/DI water. Just get a handheld TDS meter - they're like $15 or less. Just make sure you buy one that comes with a little screwdriver so you can calibrate it. Some cannot be calibrated.
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Alright I'll do this once it's hooked up. I think I will just get an inline one since they're not that expensive and the ease of use is a big appeal to me
Quote:
Originally Posted by Myka
Do you want the thread title changed? It's no longer a 29-gallon! 
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Budget doesn't exist in this hobby: Brian's 45g build
Thanks!