Been reefing for a couple years, always been space limited to small nano tanks. Super excited to be upgrading to a 65g reef ready (Aqueon). It's my first time having a sump or doing any plumbing and WOW it is kicking my butt... this may be the ugliest most Mr. Potato-head-looking build ever, but it will be hidden beneath the stand. The back of the tank I wrapped in car vinyl wrap, but left a "window" to see what my pipes look like from behind while setting up (hidden by black tower in the front). The tank comes with tubing to have it function with 1 durso drain and 1 return. I'm reconfiguring it to a herbie system. The tank's bottom glass is drilled with two 1.5" bulkheads that reduce to 3/4" and 1", respectively. Making the 3/4" my primary siphon and the 1" the emergency. Running the return up and over the back glass. The sump is a 20gL and I siliconed in (terribly) some baffles I got off Amazon. Made a little stand for the return pump to sit on so it can't overflow my tank as a redundancy measure. My return line snakes up higher than my drains, so I am hoping that is the redundancy I need? The locline is going to be around water surface height, around the same height, roughly, as the emergency drain. Was going to do a check valve in the return line, but read too many posts that scared me out of that.
The emergency drain on the right retained the adjustable height tube from Aqueon, so I can adjust the water surface height easily, but it's set right now 1/2" below the weir teeth. The primary siphon is 6" beneath the upper height of the emergency drain. Ball valve on the primary drain, too. I know, I know, gate valves are better. This ball valve will make do for now. The remainder of the hard tubing will be glued in tomorrow once the tank is up on it's stand.
The stand comes tomorrow, then I'll get the tank set up with the sump underneath and run a leak test. All the hard plumbing is primed and cemented with Oatey's. Ended up silicon-ing the bulkheads on the dry side to the PVC for additional water seal. It's not going to win a single prize in terms of aesthetics or "best practices", but it may win some for the most materials used incorrectly, redone, reconfigured, and rejiggered. Have silicone, cement, glue, and PVC dust stuck all over me, a sore back, and purple stained fingers from the Oatey's primer. But, at the end of the day, I *think* it is going to be water tight and has some measure of redundancy built in. Please, if anyone sees something dramatically wrong, don't tell me. Just let me drown in a tidal wave of despair and salt water
The emergency drain on the right retained the adjustable height tube from Aqueon, so I can adjust the water surface height easily, but it's set right now 1/2" below the weir teeth. The primary siphon is 6" beneath the upper height of the emergency drain. Ball valve on the primary drain, too. I know, I know, gate valves are better. This ball valve will make do for now. The remainder of the hard tubing will be glued in tomorrow once the tank is up on it's stand.
The stand comes tomorrow, then I'll get the tank set up with the sump underneath and run a leak test. All the hard plumbing is primed and cemented with Oatey's. Ended up silicon-ing the bulkheads on the dry side to the PVC for additional water seal. It's not going to win a single prize in terms of aesthetics or "best practices", but it may win some for the most materials used incorrectly, redone, reconfigured, and rejiggered. Have silicone, cement, glue, and PVC dust stuck all over me, a sore back, and purple stained fingers from the Oatey's primer. But, at the end of the day, I *think* it is going to be water tight and has some measure of redundancy built in. Please, if anyone sees something dramatically wrong, don't tell me. Just let me drown in a tidal wave of despair and salt water



