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kileysmama

Picture Post!!!

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Here are a few pics to keep you all in the loop on our new build.


Stand skeleton.


Tank glass drilling.


Stand in the house.


Tank and stand in place.


End of tank with closed loop plumbing visible.


Opposite end of tank painted and drilled for peninsula style closed loop and overflow.


Water!!!


Dry rock from Marco Rocks.


My new puppy, Cosworth, with a muzzle full of sand also from Marco Rocks.


The dry rock got stuck together using hydraulic cement, and the sand got put into the tank. You'll have to trust me on that, though, lol!

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Updated 05-13-2010 at 06:45 AM by melev

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Tank Entry

Comments

  1. Midnight's Avatar
    The setup looks great so far. I the sump area gonna stay open...or will there be an outer skin once complete? or is the plumbing going through wall/under floor? The only thing I would have done is put feet on the legs since you are on hardwood flooring. I have seen lighter things leave behind indents in the floor from sitting in one spot and compressing the wood.
  2. yiyi67's Avatar
    If you want to get rid of the cloudiness faster you can run a piece of filter pad in a media reactor to clear it up. It works really well.
  3. melev's Avatar
    It's good to see some progress and pictures!
  4. Hat39406's Avatar
    Wow, its going to be nice! What size tank is that?
  5. kileysmama's Avatar
    The tank is plumbed through the floor, and the sump is in the basement. The stand will stay open the way it is, but the slats on the bottom for the shelf will get nailed into place sooner or later.

    The tank size is a 205 gallon from Great Lakes Aquariums. 72x30x24

    I'd love to run a filter pad in something, but none of my old hob filters fit over the lip of htis tank. They're all for smaller tanks. I have a mag 7 pulling water from mid tank and running it into a filter sock. That's the best I could come up with for now.
  6. Turbosek's Avatar
    What is hydraulic cement, and where do you get it?

    Setup looks great!
  7. kileysmama's Avatar
    Hydraulic cement is used to block water leaks, and can actually cure under water should you need it to. We got it from Menards or Home Depot. Comes in a little milk carton-like package. The only thing you have to watch for is if you use too much at one time in an established tank, you can cause a PH spike. A few rocks here and there shouldn't be an issue, though. In our case, there isn't any livestock to worry about since this tank is still isolated from the rest of the system, and will continue to be until my small cycle is done.