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Old 03-23-2008, 11:11 PM
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This post will chronicle trials, tribulations, frustrations and happiness after moving to BC to take advantage of cheap salt and rocks.

Post is empty so that when this goes to multiple pages you aren't bombarded with images from months back...

(Apologies on Picture Size - definitely not modem friendly)

Last edited by wetcoast; 03-23-2008 at 11:26 PM.
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Old 03-23-2008, 11:12 PM
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This is my 'second' reef tank - the first was a 65 gallon experiment where I started off with no sump, and a general overall lack of knowledge. I had been living in Winnipeg for a few years, and had to get out due to the cold weather. I started planning a larger system. From a far I started picking up all the supplies I would need - a 225 gallon tank, Pumps, Skimmers, Lights, Ballasts, Heaters, you know, everything.

Boy was I in for a surprise, when I came to BC and realized that my measly money I had invested in a house in the prairies could barely buy me a garage! I had to go into a condo instead of a house and realized that I could not support the 225 on a second floor with the joists running parallel to the tank. I accepted my losses, and ordered a custom 135 (72x24x18) with a center overflow in March of 2007.

I work from home, and wanted to be able to stare at the fishtank while computing regularly, and started the construction. Due to the way the place was constructed, I had to do some considerable work to the room to prepare for the tank to fit where I wanted to. This involved closing the entrance to the room, and opening it up on the other side, while rerouting all the electrical in the room.

Some before shots:



Heeeeere's Johnny!


And it almost finished on the other side of the room. I hate drywall, taping, and sanding.




Because I did not know how my stand, canopy, or anything else would work out with my tank I had to stop work and enjoy summer. Finally at the end of August I took delivery of my new tank in the house.
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Old 03-23-2008, 11:23 PM
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Finally, at the end of August, I took delivery of my tank, stand and canopy. It was better than I expected.





(yes, thats chair is for the cat, i made it for him a few years back after he took big interest in my 65 gallon) Finally - a top down shot showing the center overflow and some other holes - more on that later.



Now that the tank was in the house, it was time to get going and finish the rest of the work. First, was the lights. I opted for 3 x 250watt Ice Cap Ballasts housed in Lumenarc Mini Reflectors. I already had a pair for the 225 build, and ordered yet another set online because I figured they would be too big for my tank, thinking I had originally bought the "normal" sized.. Another reefer on this board picked up these new ones I bought and you should be able to see them in his own respective tank build. These things are crazy:



And for good measure here's a shot of them mounted in the canopy..


For atinic supplmentation I added 2 36" 54watt T5 fixtures and mounted the ballasts underneath the stand.

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Old 03-23-2008, 11:25 PM
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I spent a considerable amount of time reading up on structural stability and decided it would be in my best interest to distribute the weight by building an oversized stand, and housing the sump, refugium and other components in the bathroom behind where the tank was going to sit. This also helped keep down the noise and gave me a bit more room to fiddle with things.

I then started work with cutting through the wall into the bathroom, and simply reinforcing the hole with a dryer vent.





With that being done it was time to dismantle the bathroom, and building a stand for the sump. (many pictures simply dont exist)
The bathroom isn't the largest of rooms so I had to rebuild my stand a few times to finally get it right.





I had just taken delivery of my Acrylic sump, and while it wasn't what I ordered in the slightest, it worked out in the long run.



I am able to drain the sump into the main sewer stack for quick water changes and releases of water (one of my pet peeves from my last tank).

At that time I commenced mounting electrical components in the equipment room underneath the countertop. In the background is an ozone generator, and an Aquatronica Power Bar, again, more on this later.


Last edited by wetcoast; 03-23-2008 at 11:37 PM.
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Old 03-23-2008, 11:39 PM
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Now it was time to make sense of the plumbing in the tank... Keeping with my original plans I went with an Oceans Motions 4-way Closed Loop powered by a Reeflo Dart. The intake is halfway up the back panel of glass, and the outputs exit at mirrored points on either side of the back pane, and the others close to the front corners on either side. I lost a few braincells gluing all this stuff together.





Closed loop plumbing completed:



There were serious delays in getting the remainder of the equipment I had ordered so I took November and December off and drank beer and snowboarded instead.

Last edited by wetcoast; 03-23-2008 at 11:51 PM.
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Old 03-24-2008, 12:17 AM
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Slowly my other ordered parts trickled in and I was able to complete the plumbing in the equipment room. One being an Ozone Reactor from Aquarium Life Support Systems.



I also built a big Air Dryer for it so that I didn't have to change beads so frequently:



A calcium reactor that I saved from my old 65 gallon made out of a very large Water container (will detail the build of that once I can find those pictures), and a Kalkwasser Reactor were put in place beside the refugium and QT tank. The Kalk reactor lasted two weeks and pee'd water all over the floor so a new one is being built.

The final piece I was missing was my skimmer. I originally had a Euro Reef CS400, but realized it was far too big for my plans and sold it. I ordered an ATI Bubble Master 250 Skimmer in July and in January just got fed up and purchased a Bubble King Mini 180 as I was starting to get a wee bit frustrated. Since I hacked up my sump stand a few times it made it quite difficult to get a skimmer in and out without draining the sump and disconnecting all the plumbing parts, so this was holding me back. I ended up modifying the stand one more time to make it all work out.





I then finished off the rest of the plumbing for the return, drain, refugium and to feed all the other components. The Ozone Reactor outputs into a TLF Phosban Reactor filled with Carbon - Another reactor will go in line in the near future. This was during the first phase of testing to see if my ideas actually worked out. There were a few issues with noise, microbubbles, leaking Snapper return pumps, and a cracked Dart Closed Loop pump, but I kept drinking beer and everything worked out.

Took my RODI unit a couple days to end up filling the whole tank, so in celebration I dumped 8 bags of sugar sand into the Refugium and Display. I'm still on the fence whether this was a good idea or not - Atinic Stew:



After that sorted itself out, I picked up 260lb of really nice pieces of rock, and got chewed out by my girlfriend for taking up her counter space.




I arranged the rockwork in both the Refugium and Display tank and let it sit for a long while. While I was waiting, I grabbed a couple pounds of sand, a couple 1" 45 degree adapters, and spread hot glue on them, for my closed loop outputs..

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