Sphinx's 125

OP
OP
sphinx15

sphinx15

Active Member
View Badges
Joined
Dec 3, 2018
Messages
138
Reaction score
226
Location
Fort Collins, CO
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I've had some new friends in qt for a few weeks now. Everyone is doing awesome and I'm super excited to get them into the main tank :)

DSC_0666-01.jpeg

Scopas Tang, Carpenter's Wrasse and Royal Gramma (quite possibly my favorite coloration of any fish :))

It's been fun to watch them all interact and get a sense of their personalities. I was a little worried about aggression from the tang being in such a small tank but it's been a perfect model citizen so far. I think having plenty of hiding spots helps and the worst I've seen so far is the gramma showing off it's big mouth to the wrasse.
 
OP
OP
sphinx15

sphinx15

Active Member
View Badges
Joined
Dec 3, 2018
Messages
138
Reaction score
226
Location
Fort Collins, CO
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Got a little bit done on the fish room, such as it is.

Added some shelves to get things off the floor and a board to secure electronics to.

DSC_0665-01.jpeg


DSC_0664-01.jpeg

It's soooo nice to finally start to get things organized...
 
OP
OP
sphinx15

sphinx15

Active Member
View Badges
Joined
Dec 3, 2018
Messages
138
Reaction score
226
Location
Fort Collins, CO
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Ugh... Apparently in the process of tearing down the 60g I managed to lose not one, not two but three power supplies. I'm missing both of the Tunze power supplies and the Reef Octopus Various controller and power supply...so that's cool...
 
OP
OP
sphinx15

sphinx15

Active Member
View Badges
Joined
Dec 3, 2018
Messages
138
Reaction score
226
Location
Fort Collins, CO
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I finally replaced my crappy looking egg crate top! :)

I went with the DD Jumpguard diy kit. I decided to make the top in 2 pieces; being a 5ft tank, I didn't want the top to be super awkward to take on and off...

DSC_0672.JPG


Everything came nicely packed. I got 5 sections of aluminum extrusion for the sides plus one center brace. You also get a bunch of corners, screen, rubber seal and installation tool.
DSC_0673.JPG


Pretty straightforward to assemble, the instructions were pretty clear. I cut all the aluminum on my chop saw and cleaned up the edges with a file. The screen is a bit tricky but by the second top I had it down pretty good. I think they turned out nice and look sooooo much better than the white egg crate!
DSC_0675.JPG
 
OP
OP
sphinx15

sphinx15

Active Member
View Badges
Joined
Dec 3, 2018
Messages
138
Reaction score
226
Location
Fort Collins, CO
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Well, I caved and did a Chemiclean dose... I had dinos that came and went pretty much as expected but this cyano bloom has been absolutely insane. It's been three weeks of trying every trick I can find only for it to get worse every day. I've been peeling huge mats off like three times a day o_O

So, sledgehammer it is. I'm normally pretty adverse to chemical treatments but having the tank completely choked out within hours every day sucks...

Everyone looks ok so far. My skimmer is churning away and I have an air stone going in the return chamber, should have plenty of aeration.

I'll keep you posted on how it goes!
 
OP
OP
sphinx15

sphinx15

Active Member
View Badges
Joined
Dec 3, 2018
Messages
138
Reaction score
226
Location
Fort Collins, CO
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
So far so good, everyone seems to be doing fine. My pipe organ is a bit irritated but it's the one that's been the most smothered by cyano every day.

There does seem to be a distinct red hue to the water this morning... :oops:
 
OP
OP
sphinx15

sphinx15

Active Member
View Badges
Joined
Dec 3, 2018
Messages
138
Reaction score
226
Location
Fort Collins, CO
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Well, everyone survived the 48hrs. Not a trace of cyano to be found! I did the 25% water change per the instructions and also added a carbon reactor to help scrub the residual Chemiclean out.

Just a BRS mini unit plumbed up to the manifold...

DSC_0709.JPG

All in all, looking pretty good :)

DSC_0712-01.jpeg

Also, all 7 fish and a shrimp are in that picture, bonus points if you can spot them all!
 
OP
OP
sphinx15

sphinx15

Active Member
View Badges
Joined
Dec 3, 2018
Messages
138
Reaction score
226
Location
Fort Collins, CO
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Well, I just got back from a two week vacation and everybody seems to have survived! :beaming-face-with-smiling-eyes:

Definitely have some cleaning to do though...
DSC_0895.JPG
 

Aurican17

New Member
View Badges
Joined
Sep 23, 2022
Messages
2
Reaction score
1
Location
Madera
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
are you still liking the Alpha-300 sump? On the verge of buying one for my upcoming 150 gallon build after a 10+ year hiatus from the hobby. I like the idea of the varied paths the water can take, if it works. What are your thoughts? I want to hear the good, bad, the ugly... what you love or hate or are "meh" about. I've read only a few reviews, there just aren't many out there. Which maybe that's a good thing since people tend to fixate on the bad and will report that sooner than something good. Any insight and/or pictures and videos of it running would be greatly appreciated!
 
OP
OP
sphinx15

sphinx15

Active Member
View Badges
Joined
Dec 3, 2018
Messages
138
Reaction score
226
Location
Fort Collins, CO
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
are you still liking the Alpha-300 sump? On the verge of buying one for my upcoming 150 gallon build after a 10+ year hiatus from the hobby. I like the idea of the varied paths the water can take, if it works. What are your thoughts? I want to hear the good, bad, the ugly... what you love or hate or are "meh" about. I've read only a few reviews, there just aren't many out there. Which maybe that's a good thing since people tend to fixate on the bad and will report that sooner than something good. Any insight and/or pictures and videos of it running would be greatly appreciated!
I'm glad you said something, I've been meaning to do a long term review but just haven't gotten around to it... See below, hopefully I answered some of your questions, let me know if you have any others :)
 
Last edited:
OP
OP
sphinx15

sphinx15

Active Member
View Badges
Joined
Dec 3, 2018
Messages
138
Reaction score
226
Location
Fort Collins, CO
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Now that I have been running this sump for a while, I feel like I can give a decent review.

As mentioned before, this is the AF-300 from Eshopps. It's a 36" sump rated for 200-300 gallons and up to 2000gph (we'll get back to that part...).

Some more quick specs:
- Total Water Volume: 38 US Gallons
- Dimensions: 36" x 16" x 16"
- Skimmer Chamber: 14" x 15.5"
- Refugium Chamber: 14" x 15.5"
- Return Pump Chamber: 8" x 15.5"
- Filter Socks: 1x 7"

Included in the box is the sump (one would hope), a single 7" filter sock, wet dry media holder, refugium weir, 2ea 1"x3' flexible return hoses, and 4 pieces of ceramic biomedia.

DSC_0439.JPG

DSC_0440.JPG

DSC_0441.JPG

Immediately apparent is the build quality. All the seams are flawless, the edges are well polished, overall the fit and finish is excellent; it's quite the striking bit of kit...

The first thing everybody asks is "how the heck does water move through that thing?". So, lets address that first.

DSC_0442.JPG

Looking at the picture above:
1. Water enters from the 3 1" bulkheads in the rear center of the tank.

2. A small amount of water passes through a port at the bottom of the drain chamber into the refugium. This water is unfiltered and contains all the goodies coming out of your tank. The refugium then fills and overflows directly into the return chamber on the far right.

3. Another small port near the top of the drain chamber flows into the return chamber over the wet/dry media basket. Again, this water is unfiltered.

4. At this point, water overflows from the drain chamber into the filter sock chamber (center rear). If the filter sock becomes clogged, water will overflow this chamber into the skimmer chamber on the left.

5. Filter water leaves the sock chamber and flows into the skimmer chamber

6. Water leaves the skimmer chamber through a passage under the sock chamber and flows into the return chamber

It's a bit of a maze but once you wrap your head around it, I think it's really clever. It totally avoids the skimmer first vs refugium first debate by providing both dirty water to the fuge and filtered water to the skimmer. The wet/dry section is a nice touch as well. I'm not sure the exact total impact it has, but it's another varied habitat for beneficial bacteria and that is always a good thing.

Since the sump is so compartmentalized, lets have a look at each compartment...

Drain/Filter Sock Compartment

DSC_0917.JPG

DSC_0918.JPG

This is, perhaps, the most straight forward compartment, but it has some nice touches. I'm a huge fan of the 3 drain bulkheads. This allows for simple plumbing of Bean Animal style drains and is something I haven't seen in a lot of other sumps. The bulkheads here are good quality and have an extension pipe on each one to reduce splashing (I did cut the extension off on my emergency drain to make it loud and obvious if it's in use). I also like the 7" sock, I feel they're easier to clean than the 4" ones. My one complaint here is water splashes pretty heavily as it enters the sock. I tried a few different silencers but I had the best result with a piece of coarse filter floss fit into the sock. The cover does an nice job of containing any salt creep.

Skimmer Compartment

DSC_0912.JPG

DSC_0913.JPG

By far the biggest compartment, there's a massive amount of space for skimmers, reactors whatever. Currently, I only have my Octo Essence 130 in there and it takes up maybe a third of the space. Also in this section are 5 dosing ports and 5 probe holders. I'm using a magnetic probe holder to allow for better height control but the dosing ports are very nice. They have 1/4" compression fittings at the top and an acrylic tube that extends down to the water. I have mine cutoff just above the waterline to help reduce buildup on the tubes. This compartment contains my only real complaint with the sump, and it has to do with the return baffle. It's not adjustable, like...at all. This means you can't control the water height in the skimmer section, you're stuck with the ~5" they give you. I'm currently getting around this by using my ATO to control the sump level (I'm keeping it at ~9"), but this is far from ideal. My ATO does pretty good at maintaining +/-1/8" but if yours allows for significant rise and fall then you may run into problems. This also means the level in the skimmer section and the return section will be the same. Not really a bad thing, just something to keep in mind. My other issue with the baffle is water leaves the compartment from the bottom so there's no surface skimming. This allows scum and foam to build up on the surface. My solution to this was to simply put in a cheap powerhead and aim it at the surface.

(From top to bottom: Filter sock overflow, Filter sock drain, Channel to return section)
DSC_0916.JPG

Refugium Compartment

DSC_0919.JPG
DSC_0907.JPG


The sump centers around having an excellent refugium solution and it's just that, excellent. The compartment is quite large compared to most other sumps and is very flexible in how you can set it up. I currently have a mix of rock, bio media and algae but you could easily set it up with a DSB or mud bed, purely algae, macro display, I even thought it might make a cool species specific display. By diverting from the main drain, the water flow through the chamber is very gentle, maybe 100gph or so; no chance of blasting all you pods and mud bed out of the sump :). I'm also a big fan of the opaque walls, they do a great job of limiting light bleed into other chambers. There is one strange design choice though; the skimmer compartment has a lovely euro-brace all the way around but the fuge for whatever reason doesn't. This means the front of the fuge section bows out about 1/4". I'm not worried about it structurally but...why?

(Here you can see the bowing of the front panel)
DSC_0908.JPG

Return Compartment

DSC_0443.JPG

DSC_0909.JPG
DSC_0910.JPG



The return chamber is fairly spacious and I'm able to fit 2 Varios 6's and 2 heaters without too much issue. As I mentioned earlier, the water level in this section is quite low by default. So low in fact that my pumps were pulling air on full power. Once I raised the water level it was fine, but something to watch out for. There is also a float valve mounted here for your ATO supply. It's a nice touch but it's mounted too low for me to make use of (It seems they may have raised this in newer production sumps). This is also where the wet/dry basket mounts. It simply hangs on the back wall next to the port from the drain chamber. There are 3 compartments that hold whatever you want to put in them; I'm using 2" Marinepure cubes and they work great.

Conclusion
Overall, I think it's a great sump. It has a unique and well executed design and the build quality is fantastic. All in all, I'm very happy with it. It does have a few flaws, but they're easy enough to work around and I'm happy to deal with them. A lot of reviews I have seen complain about the weird water path, but, honestly, I think they did a very good job with it and I think it address several (admittedly niche) problems a lot of sumps have. I also think a lot of the issues others have had may stem from low flow (see, I told you I'd get back to it!) With the way the water flows into the fuge and wet/dry basket, you lose a decent amount of flow before you get to the filter sock, maybe 200-300gph (I have no way to measure this, just eyeballing it). As such, I'd say you need at least around 800-1000gph running through your system; this is about where I'm at and everything seems to be moving as intended. Another common complaint is water just flows over the filter sock and out into the skimmer section. I haven't seen anything like this, I suppose if your sock was always super dirty and clogged maybe but I change mine weekly and haven't seen any problems. One last mark against the design is the really isn't a good way to integrate an off the shelf fleece roller. Klir has a 7" drop in model but I'm not sure it would quite work. I am, however, working on a custom 7" sock replacement roller so stay tuned for that ;) Wrapping up, I think this is a great sump and if you're looking for something with a great refugium chamber and plenty of space for equipment, I wouldn't hesitate to recommend it.

Thanks for reading!

Obligatory Cat-Tax
DSC_0451.JPG
 

Attachments

  • DSC_0908.JPG
    DSC_0908.JPG
    85.8 KB · Views: 78
OP
OP
sphinx15

sphinx15

Active Member
View Badges
Joined
Dec 3, 2018
Messages
138
Reaction score
226
Location
Fort Collins, CO
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Looking great! Any recent updates?
Actually yeah! :beaming-face-with-smiling-eyes:

Where to start, it's been a minute...
Current status?

DSC_1057.JPG

Mostly everything has be trucking along pretty good. I'm finally seeing some good stability and overall the health of the tank seems pretty good. I have had some not insignificant issues over the last couple months though.

The first was aiptasia. I had a few pop up here and there ever since swapped everything to the replacement tank and I thought I was doing a decent job of dealing with it, Aiptasia-X, removing some rocks, some epoxy here and there etc. Apparently, I wasn't doing nearly as good of a job as I though because, seemingly over the course of a week, it was on basically every surface of the tank; it was even in the seams of the Loc-line of the returns. Not in huge colonies but it was apparent it was going to become a problem quickly. I decided to try some berghia nudi's and added 10 to the tank. They didn't seem to do much at first but after about two weeks I noticed a few of the aiptasia I had been watching were gone. I thought after this initial, if slow, success they'd slowly work their way across the tank. Then, literally three days later, not a single aiptasia to be seen; it was wild. Never actually saw the berghias after I put them in but can't argue with the results!

I also had some sort of mini crash at some point. I'm still not sure what happened, I never saw anything in my testing, but I ended up losing almost all the monti's, one of the turbinarias, my hammer and my duncan. The duncan and turbinaria are slooooowwwlyyy making a recovery, but no luck with the monti's and the hammer ejected and I never was able to find it. Hopefully it was a one time deal. I did send off an ICP test that came back all clear so I don't know. Most of the rest of the corals did fine during this time and the pipe organ absolutely exploded in size.

The most depressing thing by far though was velvet. Fortunately, the QT setup did exactly what it was suppose to and it never made it to the main tank but still... I ended up losing three wrasses and a copperband. It's amazing how quickly velvet acts...definitely no fun. I will absolutely be running a QT for everybody who gets added in the future.

I haven't made any progress/changes to the tank or equipment recently. Still haven't done the doors, but they are on the list I swear :upside-down-face:. I did whip up a little filling wand a couple of weeks ago and it's currently my new favorite thing, no more holding hoses!
DSC_1056.JPG

Sorry for the lack of updates, it's been a stressful and hectic past few months. I'm hoping to have a bit more time to put into the tank and get things going again. I also want to get back into keeping this updated, I just spent a few minutes reading through this today and it was a fun to look back on everything. So check back for some more updates soon!
 

TOP 10 Trending Threads

WHAT AMOUNT OF LIVE ROCK AND SAND SHOULD BE PRIORITIZED FOR OPTIMAL BIODIVERSITY/FILTRATION?

  • 100% live rock + bagged sand

    Votes: 34 26.6%
  • 100% dry rock + 100% live sand

    Votes: 45 35.2%
  • 50/50 live/dry rock, 50/50 live/bagged sand

    Votes: 28 21.9%
  • 75% live rock, 25% live sand

    Votes: 11 8.6%
  • 25% live rock, 75% live sand

    Votes: 10 7.8%
Back
Top