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Lone Reefer

This is a bad idea.

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I've always loved mixed materials in buildings and designs. The last home my family built had dark, charcoal grey polished concrete floors. My room had light green walls and rich wood furniture. It was actually very calming. Since then I've played around with a few ideas. I built a concrete fish tank that functioned fine but didn’t come out perfect and I never had a second go at it since it was pretty hard to make. But let’s bring it forward to today. Plywood tanks. I've read up on all the ones I can find and I'm sure you’ve seen some of them as well. All of them seem to be 300G plus. But what’s wrong with a small one. Yes I started down this road to save money but the design grew and the plans changed and now this is what I want. Not just what I can afford. It reminds me of the big tanks everyone has. They all have a wood stand (unless you’re Marc) and most have a wooden hood. Let’s face it, wooden accents just look good with a reef when done right. But what about us apartment livers who can't ante up to a tank that needs anything made of wood. I wanted more than a tank, more than black plastic and glass. I wanted something that captivates me with more than what is on the inside. After months of drawing and thinking I’ve got my design down. AND THE WOODS ALREADY CUT!!!! Within 24 hours of deciding to make it I bought the wood and cut it up. So no MS paint to tease you with. Here’s the tank.

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I will have filtration on both sides running one at a time. Not sure on the timing yet but this will give me a nice changing flow. Each side will be packed with rubble and have mangroves growing out of it. The wood will be stained to a natural dark color. This will give me my brown dead wood and live green colors growing out. I’m going to go with t5s or PC since its only 14 deep and it will mainly be chalice. Nothing in the picture is screwed together yet. Tonight I picked up the epoxy and already have a test coat going on scrap wood.

Updates will follow.

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Updated 01-25-2014 at 12:03 AM by melev

Categories
Tank Entry , ‎ DIY projects

Comments

  1. melev's Avatar
    Interesting.What are your thoughts about water not circulating on one side for a duration while the other side is providing flow?

    I edited your blog for format. While in the editor, if you double click an image, the option to have it display full size is a single click away. Save and submit.
  2. Lone Reefer's Avatar
    Quote Originally Posted by melev
    Interesting.What are your thoughts about water not circulating on one side for a duration while the other side is providing flow?

    I edited your blog for format. While in the editor, if you double click an image, the option to have it display full size is a single click away. Save and submit.
    Thanks for the tip and doing it for me haha. I'm thinking it needs to be a rather short rotation to avoid temperature drops. I plan on putting the heater in the center compartment. I'm not sure how it will effect nutrient export with the mangroves either. But that's not really an issue I guess. I can only foresee the temp swing and ware on the pumps being an issue. Am I missing anything? You've built so many tanks you will have more knowledge on this then me.
  3. melev's Avatar
    I'd have to think about it for a bit. Maybe a smaller powerhead for the low flow period, and then the normal size one for the full flow? This avoids stagnation. How long were you thinking between switching sides?
  4. Lone Reefer's Avatar
    Maybe 30 mins to an hour. I might end up running both at the same time. Although currently I like to idle down when lights are off so the big small idea is growing on me. Everything in front of me right now is physical work so I need to start researching lights and pumps so I can keep the project rolling all the way through.
  5. melev's Avatar
    30 minutes may be the maximum you can do this, because I'm pretty certain the "off" zone will cool off before it re-mixes with the rest.