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coralcruze

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I've been very busy the past few months building a concept for a custom reef tank that I've had for a while. My idea is to build a tank that will implement waterfalls as a key aesthetic feature but yet be a completly funtional reef tank. In addition to this I wanted a tank that will have a built in frag tank, a seperate sump to hide all equipment, absolutly NO POWER heads in the main display tank as I am shooting for a natural look and power heads or any equipment in the main display just detracts from the overall apeal for me. I also NEEDED this tank to be super quiet as it is going in the LR and the wife just won't have that :) Maintenance and automation is a real big concern which I hope to address with this design. Basically it will be a fully functioning reef that will require as little maintenance as possible with the aid of pushing todays tried and tested technology as far as I possibly could. That was the concept anyway and my hope is that I can take my 15 years of reefing expierience and draw upon the many mistakes that I and many others have made and do this right. This was a pretty ambitiouse design problem but I felt I was ready to tackle it after planning it for months and came up with actual construction documents for the build. First, I started to sketch it all out and then refined the sketches and then more refining untill I got it to the point I could start inputing some concrete numbers and information into a CAD program. For those of you who jump right into building befor a good solid design and plan...STOP! I would highly recomment to reconsider this approach even if its a simple box. Have someone draw it out, you would be amazed by how many problems you can avoid with a solid design and construction document set. All too often no drawings leads to oversights, problems and issues during the build which raises the cost... Use the services of a qualified designer. This will save you the trouble later and will lead to a well rounded and functional design. It WILL also SAVE you money. A little pre-planning and investment upfront goes a long way towards getting what you want done right the first time.

Since I am a designer by trade I am lucky to have access to CAD design software and knowlege to implement it. Hire someone to do this for you if needed, nope not a builder. a BUILDER is just that a person who builds off of a plan. We ask alot of builders if we expect the to design something while they build it. You need a designer first then hire the builder of choice. If you have a concept start there and let the designer refine it for you and build upon this concept. . This is far too often overlooked and I commonly hear, my builder missed this or that only to find out that corners were cut and the builder had to devise a design as he was building. These guys are not designers they are builders.

Anyway my other passion is to see through the design and build the concept once I design it. I love building things. However, I take great pride in building it right the first time. If you don't than hire someone to build it for you. I have learned through expierience that whenever you cut corners, it will usually show in the final product. Whenever you try to save a buck, that too will show somewhere. There is a great deal of good literature out there that will give you basic skills to improve upon to build anything you want.

Lastly, don't let anyone tell you that you can't do something. I've havd people tell me this many times and this time was no exception to this rule. In my case I used this as fuel to move forward towards a finshed product... Don't get me wrong I tried to hire people for this build but it just didn't work out. It was time to take out the tools and do it myself :D

So I began the design process but will spare you the hundreds and hundreds of pages showing the design changes. Rather I'll jump right into the heart of it all and upload the nice stuff like the 3d CAD renderings that I produced and then go into some pictures of the actual build itself. That is if there is an actual interest...
 
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coralcruze

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Location
Westchester NY
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231   11   0
ok here is the rendering of the entire tank design on CAD: basically the water is fed from the custom designed spigot that you see hanging on the back wall that feeds the tank and the water overflows the two side walls. from there the water enters the two frag trays on the sides (I will get a better 3d shot of that below). Lastly the water drains from the frag trays into the sump below the tank via a full siphon stockman standpipe. More on this later.
tank.jpg
 
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coralcruze

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Location
Westchester NY
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here is the concept of my sump: remember that there are two side wall waterfalls so I needed to design this sump to recieve the water coming in from both sides of the tank. The two back chambers accept bulkheads from each side into the small chambers which delivers the water directly into the skimmer chamber and then through baffles and into the water treatment chamber which if the front chamber and cycle startes all over back to the tank.

3dviewsump3.jpg
 

coralcruze

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Westchester NY
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and here is where I'm at now... does it look something like the design concept? I hope so. The picture below is from a few days ago when I (for the first time and holding my breath,lol) tested and filled the tank with fresh water. happy to report no leaks.

IMG_5736.jpg
 
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coralcruze

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Location
Westchester NY
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231   11   0
Sounds cool. Can't wait to see what you have come up with Ben.

Hey there... I guess I couldnt get out of the hobby. Once in it there is no gettin out :D

Hey dude I dig it. If i were you check out the konoloua reef tank. I think his design can help you out. Also the deep sea neo nano uses a similar concept.

Oh yeah, I've seen those tanks... The Konoloua volcano tank is quite a concept and I love the idea of a shallow reef which mine will hopefully become. I hope that my design will prove to be a bit differant that those concepts. we shall see.
 
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seldin

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... deep sea neo nano uses a similar concept...

Yes. In a tank thread, the owner ( I think ) added a vortech to help with circulation as there was not enough for a reef tank. That setup, was less flow for more of a "lagoon setup".

Good luck.
 

coralcruze

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Location
Westchester NY
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231   11   0
Looks great, but the pic makes it look like it has a black 'top' on the tank, is it just the reflection from euro-bracing and/or the rear wall? How many gallons is it?


now that you mention it... you are right it does. But no this is a rimless but since it has two overflowing walls the picture is an optical illution. there is no light above the tank in the picture so the water line apears black since the back wall is in fact black. I have to get more pictures on here since there is an interest and I blame YOU for getting me back in, lol. Its all your fault :D

The main tank will have 100 gallons but is 36" x 36" x 18" and there is an additional 35 gallon sump below.
 

coralcruze

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Location
Westchester NY
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231   11   0
here are some shots of my light box that I built from scratch which is overhang directly over the center of the rimless tank. In case you are wondering if your eyes are playing tricks on you??? they aren't that light is actually completly overhanging from the wall via a specialized but modifiesd :D bracket. The light box you see weighs about 80 lbs. and its protruding about 2 feet from the wall so yeah there is some special considerations there. I wouldn't go hanging from it but it will surely twice its weight as designed and built... easily


The wires you see will not be hanging into the tank but will be concealed into the bracket arms.

IMG_5583.jpg


IMG_5581.jpg


IMG_5580.jpg
 

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