- Joined
- Aug 8, 2015
- Messages
- 1,487
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Different strokes. I'm not saying you can't have an amazing tank with powerheads. 99% of them are. You are right that they burn allot more power, cost more to implement, and are harder to install. But in certain situations in larger system that are very wide and viewed from all 3 sides, or a peninsula where your only option for flow is the one side panel , they are still relevant and there isn't a powerhead on the market that can offer the ability to hide the nozzles in the rock work blowing out in all directions. I know a guy locally who has a 7' x 4' peninsula with 4 MP 60s on the side panel with the overflow, and two 150 gyers on the opposite viewing panel. He still have major issues with stuff settling because he can't get any flow inside the rock work. His tank is amazing with 3 400 MH radiums and 6 radion pros, but he has to take a turkey baster or small powerhead and blow out the rocks every week. I remember a build years ago where a guy built giant columns in the middle of the tank, so he could run Vortechs in the middle of his tank blowing out towards the viewing panels. He built the rock up around them so you couldn't see them. It was pretty neat. If they made magnetically coupled powerhead that had an articulating head, that would be awesome. You could stick them to the bottom glass of the tank and turn them out in any direction you wanted. My dream system with money not an object would be built with a peninsula or an all sides viewable tank with several (3-4) close loops hidden in the rock work flowing in many different directions. I always thought Peter's 1300 gallon tank was amazing, and I think he only used closed loops. Although it was probably 200-300K to build. So when I win the lottery, I'll build us both one! I couldn't believe when his came apart...
