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180g Tank Build - 11 mos. and counting.

Some questionable quality photos of my general setup...

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The right side of the tank:
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middle:
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left:
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obligatory RBTA shot:
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Left end of the tank:
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Behind the tank in the fish room...
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RO/DI setup with sprinkler valve. I did this because my RO/DI whines when the float valve shuts it off. Can be quite annoying, so I've restricted operation to the wee hours of the morning when I'm two floors away and can't hear it protesting.
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The 55 gal sump, Ca reactor, and return pump. I had a local glass guy cut me 3 pieces for a baffle and cut a hole for the pump return. Works like a charm.
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Frag Tank is in my "work area" above the sump. ...complete with ugly DIY cree LED build.
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Fuge is above the work area on the homemade shelving structure behind the white styrafoam. Everything does a nice, efficient gravity drain. I tried like heck to get gravity drain to feed my skimmer, but didn't end up getting it to work at the flow rate I wanted.
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The electrical panel I put together for the LED drivers and reef angel controller:
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The hurricone. I've recently been playing around with it for various experimental reasons. recently added an overflow bucket to drain the collection cup and went to a fairly wet skim consistency. I like the results so far. The other trick I'm trying is patching the bubble king air intake directly into the collection cup of the skimmer. I figure it will cut down a LOT on evaporation by creating almost a closed loop air system - so I should benefit in a few ways. 1) Less stink because of having the skimmer 'exhaust' dumping straight into the fish room. 2) less RO/DI water required for top off. 3) Less power used in the winter for heating. I wonder if other people have tried this and measured results... I just rigged this up a week ago and I've already noticed a big difference in top off water used.
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Above the skimmer in the corner is my salt drum. Gotta love gravity feed

Here's a shot of my DIY LED array over the main tank. It's so powerful that it typically makes new corals cower. I had to dial it back a bit, which makes me very happy. Saves energy and LEDs will last longer.
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Tags: led skimmer
Categories
Tank - Full Summary , ‎ Lighting , ‎ Photography/Video , ‎ DIY projects , ‎ Equipment

Comments

  1. Midnight's Avatar
    The pictures look fine, though a tad small. We are are all underfed picture devourers that like lots of large pictures, lol!
  2. jlemoine2's Avatar
    I agree with Midnight, the pictures look fine in quality... but they are small. You have quite the setup going there. How big is that fish room? I appears you have some blue reef chromis, how big are they?
  3. blennyman's Avatar
    Ah - good to know about the picture size. I did a resize and aimed a bit low.

    I do have a single reef chromis - I'd say he's almost 3 inches long and along with the purple tang and lawnmower blenny is among the longest residents in my reef. Started out with ~6 or so of them thinking they would school like b/g chromis and be quite peaceful. They do school, but peaceful they are not. They pick on the smallest one until it dies and on up the line until there is only one left. THEN they become relatively peaceful - though he's always the first to harass a new tank addition by flipping his tail fin in the new tank mate's face. Even so, he's quite beautiful. Great coloration and such an effortless skimmer. The only more agile swimmers are the anthias and the carpenter's wrasse.
  4. DJ in WV's Avatar
    do you like the cat2e? I run on my 180 also with about 250ish total volume. I have the askol on mine with the water cooling mod. I believe you meant bubble blaster pump ( bubbleking is a different skimmer) Have you had any trouble with it I have had a few start up issues with the askol on mine. Looks good I jealous I have not been able to get my tank as well stock as your yet, we have 8 kids and it puts a serious damper on my reefing budget. I have the ugliest fishroom on here look at some of my build threads and look at the mess I started with, Your in good shape Thanks for sharing
  5. blennyman's Avatar
    yeah - I meant bubble blaster. Mine had the overheating problem as well - talked to Jeremy at Coralvue and he took care of me. I sent my Askol back and got the bubble blaster which I think is hands down the better pump. More air bubbles and less power consumed. I started off with a used coralife super skimmer so you can imagine how pleased I am with the hurricone. Super skimmers aren't worth the plastic they're made of. I also did the gate valve mod on the output of the 2e, so it's quite precise on water level now. The 2e is now almost set and forget - and I get a lot of gunky skimmate - and the algae growth has gone from big problem to tolerable nuisance, even with a much denser bio-load.
  6. DJ in WV's Avatar
    Yea I am going to do the gate valve also not a fan of the stand pipe adjuster that come on it way to touchy, also think that the out put could have been 2 or 3 in higher so im going to order a new metric union with the gate valve and try that the adjust on it now I have to keep almost completely closed and I have enough flow that I have to blow into the air intake to get it started. But its build like a tank and coralvue is good about customer service will diffidently continue to do business with them, I got mine new for 520 dollar from reef specialty was a great deal for that size ext skimmer
  7. blennyman's Avatar
    Yes - that's my only complaint about the skimmer - I can't just go to Lowe's to get plumbing parts. I also wish the exhaust was a bit taller. I guess if I was looking for a custom skimmer, I should have made one myself. Boy, that's a lot of flow if you need to 'kick start' it. Are you worried at all about a power outage? I guess so long as you have your air intake sufficiently above the water line, you're OK. ...just lose the skimming ability until you re-start. I think I paid a similar amount for my skimmer a year ago - some crazy sale at saltysupply.
  8. Sisterlimonpot's Avatar
    What are your thoughts on the reef angel controller?
  9. blennyman's Avatar
    Reef angel is good if you have some C/C++ experience. The appeal for me was the ability to ramp up/dn my LED whites and blues separately and program it how I want. You can also use it as: pH protection for your Ca reactor solenoid, a rudimentary wavemaker if you have the proper powerheads, temp protection from your heaters, water level sensing, etc. It's fairly inexpensive and has a good support community with a reasonable codebase. It's not without its problems. the LED screen on mine is subject to interference so if I have a power cord too close, it will go black and need a reboot. I also wish there were more pwm ports - I had to multiplex mine by using a relay I picked up at the local radioshack. I also fused one of the relays together by gating on/off a couple of meanwell drivers. I'll chalk that one up to pilot error. If you are looking for an out of box solution that's fairly well polished, I'd probably look elsewhere - but if you have some patience, like to tinker, and want everything controlled just the way you like it, the Reef Angel might be a good option for you.