So, how do you turn a tragedy into something good?
About 2 yrs ago I had a 125G that had started 10 yrs earlier as a FOWLR, no sump, all hang on back stuff. I had been adding and upgrading and tinkering and well, most of you know the drill. LFS was having a tank sale and got a great deal on a Marineland 180G reef ready tank. My idea was to put it on the custom cabinets I'd had made for the 125G (there was enough depth) and put a sump in the basement underneath. Here is a pic of the original setup.
I bought the 180 and also got a 75G sump from a local guy who was moving. I dithered about, trying to decide how best to swap out an existing tank and put the replacement in without losing thousands of $'s of livestock. The 180 and sump went into the barn while I tried to come up with a plan.
Well, Long story short, we were out of town and there was a lightning strike on the power pole which traveled through the underground power and caught the house on fire. We live in the woods, middle of nowhere, no neighbors. By the time anyone figured out where the smoke was coming from, it had been going for 3-4 hrs.
Soooooooo, no longer a problem worrying about losing the livestock. More worried about little things like, where are we going to live? In the 2 years that followed I learned many lessons, including...
1- know what's important, no one died, It's just stuff. Important, seemingly irreplaceable stuff, but stuff nonetheless.
2- The value of good insurance, Wow, unreal what a difference this can make. I was fortunate and had the great fortune to have good insurance. Hated writing that check every year, but will never, ever begrudge the annual premium now.
3- Look for the silver linings, very easy to get discouraged and angry/upset. It's much harder to look for the bright side, but much more rewarding.
So, one of my silver linings is that I can start the build for my new tank from scratch. Do it right the first time (or at least as good as I can). I posted a thread last year asking for ideas and got lots of great suggestions, among them
Plenty of dedicated power
floor drain
supports
water station
Somewhere along the way I picked up a used 75G setup from a local guy who was upgrading for a steal of a deal. It's allowed me to feed my addiction for coral, without having to rush into this build. But now I'm getting the itch, seeing that open, empty cabinet sitting there waiting is getting to me.
Quick note: yes, that is a different house. We rebuilt the same floor plan. We loved that house, why mess with a good thing?
Here is a picture of the basement/sump area below the tank cabinet upstairs.
My plan is to put a low (4") lip across the front of that alcove and tile the whole thing, putting a shower type drain on the PVC drain in the floor. I'm imaging putting the sump on a low-ish stand (maybe 18-24") so I can siphon out junk and make it easier to work on. The sump has a 24" refugium section, but I'm mulling over the idea of a separate fuge on a bypass from the return back to the sump. Maybe add that later. To jump start myself, and to generate some more enthusiasm I placed an order for hardware earlier this week. I guess I'm supposed to put a "list" of equipment I'm using, that seems to be the way these threads read. Excuse me, but posting a "build thread" isn't really something I planned on doing, but I'm probably going to be asking for help at some point and thought it would be helpful to have a reference somewhere to point to.
Lights- Giessman Aurora T5-LED Hybrid 60" (side note: bought this fixture from @Greengny who won it from BRS and couldn't use such a big fixture, thanks man, finally getting around to using this beauty)
Return pump- Abyzz A200 DC pump
Controller- Apex
PowerHeads, MP40's/10
Skimmer- Vertex Alpha 200
ATO- Osmolator
Planning on using fiji live-rock, got a couple boxes airfreighted in when I did my "temporary tank" and it was beautiful. Cured in like 3 days in a 45G Brute.
So, pump arriving today, the balance of the stuff is coming middle of next week. I've got my cabinet guy coming back next week (I'm going to have him add another interior frame inside the cabinet just to be safe..............even though he built it to park a truck on top of).
And while I've got you here, here are a couple pics of what's going on in my temp 75G
Excuse the ugly piece of rock behind this one, just came out of the sump.
Thanks for looking, hope it's not too long till I'm able to update.
#reef2reef #worldwidecorals #mywwccontest
About 2 yrs ago I had a 125G that had started 10 yrs earlier as a FOWLR, no sump, all hang on back stuff. I had been adding and upgrading and tinkering and well, most of you know the drill. LFS was having a tank sale and got a great deal on a Marineland 180G reef ready tank. My idea was to put it on the custom cabinets I'd had made for the 125G (there was enough depth) and put a sump in the basement underneath. Here is a pic of the original setup.
I bought the 180 and also got a 75G sump from a local guy who was moving. I dithered about, trying to decide how best to swap out an existing tank and put the replacement in without losing thousands of $'s of livestock. The 180 and sump went into the barn while I tried to come up with a plan.
Well, Long story short, we were out of town and there was a lightning strike on the power pole which traveled through the underground power and caught the house on fire. We live in the woods, middle of nowhere, no neighbors. By the time anyone figured out where the smoke was coming from, it had been going for 3-4 hrs.
Soooooooo, no longer a problem worrying about losing the livestock. More worried about little things like, where are we going to live? In the 2 years that followed I learned many lessons, including...
1- know what's important, no one died, It's just stuff. Important, seemingly irreplaceable stuff, but stuff nonetheless.
2- The value of good insurance, Wow, unreal what a difference this can make. I was fortunate and had the great fortune to have good insurance. Hated writing that check every year, but will never, ever begrudge the annual premium now.
3- Look for the silver linings, very easy to get discouraged and angry/upset. It's much harder to look for the bright side, but much more rewarding.
So, one of my silver linings is that I can start the build for my new tank from scratch. Do it right the first time (or at least as good as I can). I posted a thread last year asking for ideas and got lots of great suggestions, among them
Plenty of dedicated power
floor drain
supports
water station
Somewhere along the way I picked up a used 75G setup from a local guy who was upgrading for a steal of a deal. It's allowed me to feed my addiction for coral, without having to rush into this build. But now I'm getting the itch, seeing that open, empty cabinet sitting there waiting is getting to me.
Quick note: yes, that is a different house. We rebuilt the same floor plan. We loved that house, why mess with a good thing?
Here is a picture of the basement/sump area below the tank cabinet upstairs.
My plan is to put a low (4") lip across the front of that alcove and tile the whole thing, putting a shower type drain on the PVC drain in the floor. I'm imaging putting the sump on a low-ish stand (maybe 18-24") so I can siphon out junk and make it easier to work on. The sump has a 24" refugium section, but I'm mulling over the idea of a separate fuge on a bypass from the return back to the sump. Maybe add that later. To jump start myself, and to generate some more enthusiasm I placed an order for hardware earlier this week. I guess I'm supposed to put a "list" of equipment I'm using, that seems to be the way these threads read. Excuse me, but posting a "build thread" isn't really something I planned on doing, but I'm probably going to be asking for help at some point and thought it would be helpful to have a reference somewhere to point to.
Lights- Giessman Aurora T5-LED Hybrid 60" (side note: bought this fixture from @Greengny who won it from BRS and couldn't use such a big fixture, thanks man, finally getting around to using this beauty)
Return pump- Abyzz A200 DC pump
Controller- Apex
PowerHeads, MP40's/10
Skimmer- Vertex Alpha 200
ATO- Osmolator
Planning on using fiji live-rock, got a couple boxes airfreighted in when I did my "temporary tank" and it was beautiful. Cured in like 3 days in a 45G Brute.
So, pump arriving today, the balance of the stuff is coming middle of next week. I've got my cabinet guy coming back next week (I'm going to have him add another interior frame inside the cabinet just to be safe..............even though he built it to park a truck on top of).
And while I've got you here, here are a couple pics of what's going on in my temp 75G
Excuse the ugly piece of rock behind this one, just came out of the sump.
Thanks for looking, hope it's not too long till I'm able to update.
#reef2reef #worldwidecorals #mywwccontest