And of course everything we read is true.....so that's one amazing pump, lol.
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I have some experience with different turnover rates to the sump, including changes on a single tank so I could see the difference.
With very low rates like <1x per hour, the tank accumulated more waste, filtration was less effective. I could not really keep uneaten food, detritus, etc suspended long enough to move it to the sump. A film developed on water surface in the tank and sump. Also, at very low turnover the water level looked weird, too low, flowing into the overflow box. It was probably all fine, but I didn’t like it, and eventually went up in pump size.
I don’t have a magic number. I like to get as low as practical because it’s quieter and uses less energy, Recent tanks have been 3x-5x
Agree. I don’t have much of an opinion on it, just some experience and observation.There are various opinions on too fast or too slow sump turn over rates
I have some experience with different turnover rates to the sump, including changes on a single tank so I could see the difference.
With very low rates like <1x per hour, the tank accumulated more waste, filtration was less effective. I could not really keep uneaten food, detritus, etc suspended long enough to move it to the sump. A film developed on water surface in the tank and sump. Also, at very low turnover the water level looked weird, too low, flowing into the overflow box. It was probably all fine, but I didn’t like it, and eventually went up in pump size.
I don’t have a magic number. I like to get as low as practical because it’s quieter and uses less energy, Recent tanks have been 3x-5x
You can deal with detritus by dosing Phyto. And with your lower turnover rate, Phyto will be mostly in the tank.Thanks. I can see the detritus issue if flow in the tank is not high enough to keep it suspended long enough to pass over the overflow, and that time needed needed will lengthen if the turnover is lower. :)
You can deal with detritus by dosing Phyto.
Is brass OK in a reef tank? I thought we should be sticking to Stainless Steel or Plastic.Cooling System
2. When cooling is needed, the controller sends 110V to a solenoid connected to the cold tap water supply. (U.S. Solid 3/4" Brass Electric Solenoid Valve 110V AC Normally Closed Non-potable Water, air, Diesel). It is normally closed solenoid that only opens when it gets power, and only stays open if power continues to flow. I mistakenly got 3/4" female pipe thread connections while the supply is 1/2", so I needed some bushing adapters to connect it. Amazon, $27.
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3. I wanted to be able to close it off from the water supply when there's no reason for cooling, and to slow down the flow when I am using it, so I got a valve to put between it and the water supply. $12 from amazon. Same 3/4" mistake and so needed more more bushings, but this is the one:
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Hi Randy- great to see this thread, I've appreciated your chem advice while getting back into the hobby after a long hiatus.The IO I just bought from Amazon was $67 for 200 gallon box, with free 2 day delivery. The 50 gallon bag is $21 and can be delivered free same day.
Same vendor, Red Sea 55 gallon blue bucket is $47 for 55 gallon bucket, and takes longer to arrive (5 days).
I found that even fairly significant flow didn’t keep particles in turbulent suspension for say…an hour :)Thanks. I can see the detritus issue if flow in the tank is not high enough to keep it suspended long enough to pass over the overflow, and that time needed needed will lengthen if the turnover is lower. :)
Is brass OK in a reef tank? I thought we should be sticking to Stainless Steel or Plastic.
I found that even fairly significant flow didn’t keep particles in turbulent suspension for say…an hour :)
Hi Randy- great to see this thread, I've appreciated your chem advice while getting back into the hobby after a long hiatus.
You've probably considered this, but IO and most other salts (other than Brightwell) calculate their gallons/container at a lower salinity than you'll probably run. For example, IO uses 1.022 sg. When I factored that in and did the math on the best prices I could easily obtain, IO "160" buckets (actually mixes to ~140 gal) have still always been the cheapest, with the "200" box (actually ~175 gal) close behind. Most other salts run about 30-40% higher, with TM Pro usually leading the pack at about 75% higher. In case it's ever an issue, I've found that Chewy and PetSmart usually price match Amazon on IO, and PetSmart can be ordered for same day local store pickup in a pinch.
Oh, I get it. You're using tap water to cool the tank via tubing that goes through the tank water. Thanks.It is not acceptable in the salt water. I used it for a tubing to tubing connecter on tap water that never mixes with tank water, and the coupling is before the tubing enters the salt water. :)
Oh, I get it. You're using tap water to cool the tank via tubing that goes through the tank water. Thanks.
They seem to consume it. I had a nice 3/8 thick layer of detritus in my sump after a year of running the tank fish only. I started heavy dosing Tetraselmis Phyto, within 3 months sump was clean, I could see glass again.How does dosing phyto reduce detritus?
I do plan to dose phyto later when there are filter feeders present.
They seem to consume it. I had a nice 3/8 thick layer of detritus in my sump after a year of running the tank fish only. I started heavy dosing Tetraselmis Phyto, within 3 months sump was clean, I could see glass again.