• Why not take a moment to introduce yourself to our members?

curator

Experienced Reefer
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
720 Gallon Project Update Part Four

This is part of a series covering the trials and tribulations of the home coral farm.

Not many things happened over the Holidays, time constraints, bills J

This is an update of changes that had to be made to the Zoanthus System that
I covered last time. Some of the changes are minor but provide some new
Ideas.

zoo1a.jpg


On of the first problems I encountered was with the way I mounted the lights. I
Did use standard PVC to extend the cable outward to suspend the fixture more
Towards the middle of the tank. Pressure held the PVC section against the wall.
On a few occasions it fell and the PVC tubs fell in the tank hitting the fixture
On the way down. I purchased PVC end caps and screwed them into the wall,
And mounted the PVC tube into the end cap.

zoo2.jpg


Next area of concern was the lighting itself. Above you can see I had to lower
The lights considerably from the first post. Originally since I have incorporated
Natural light I felt any artificial light needed would be minimum. After attempting
A power quad above the Zoanthus I was still not able to get the colors I obtained
Under MH’s with no natural light.

zoo3.jpg


I moved to a VHO hood with four 4 foot bulbs.
Two actinic, and two daylight. I had started the fixture about 14 inches above the
Tank with a photo period of 8 hours, the change made a very minimal impact in the
Coloration. I then (pictured above) lowered the fixture to 7 inches above the water
Surface, raised the shelf two inches and increased the photo period to 12 hours.
While I am seeing a positive progression of more intense colors the fixture is
Now so low it has really become cumbersome to work around and I have decided
To sell it and purchase two PFO 250 watt pendants

zoo4.jpg


Another area of concern is current. I have seen a few farms operate on air lifts
Constructed of PVC and air pumps to generate current and on my visit the corals
Seemed healthy so it appeared to be enough. Originally I connected a 360 Ocean
Current rotating head to a Mag 7 via PVC and connected that right to the side of
The tank.

zoo5.jpg


With the density of the zoos and heavy feeding I am coming up with
Problematic algae. I’m sure I will have to increase the current in the tank
Considerably. I think if the vessel were smaller the Ocean Currents Head would
Be fine, but it is undersized for this installation, and adding more will interfere
With working around the corals.

zoo6.jpg


The last modification is the shelving. I had the shelves for the zoos drilled
With holes at O.D. about 2 inches apart. This turned out to be a large mistake
Because I was just not able to get enough in the tank. I had previously grown
In small 40 gallon break out systems and was getting more with the old
Rack which were one inch apart. I had some new shelves made and hope to
Use the ones I have no elsewhere. In addition to the spacing another area I
Changed was the rack itself. From the original post and the photo below
You can see I made a rack to keep the two shelves next to each other at
An equal height. I did the exact same thing in my previous tanks and it
Worked fine. With this round tub however, since there is no turn over
It seemed to add to poor circulation so I rebuilt the rack to make the
Shelves at two different heights.
 

craw

Experienced Reefer
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I noticed in this picture.

zoo5.jpg


That the eggcrate wasa high in the tank. Is the space below void of sand and or anyother type of substrate? If so. Why did you decied to do it that way instead of adding a DSB to help with nutrient export and the place your frags on top of that? Other then that, WOW. Looks great!
 

curator

Experienced Reefer
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Craw:

The shelf you see is two sheets of acrylic , with many drilled holes.
The shelves are about 5 inches below the surface of the water. A
PVC structure holds them up. Underneath I have a 6 inch DSB, and
Live rock. The rock is piled up around the 4 supporting pillars of
PVC that hold the shelf.

This is an earlier photo, I have since made this into a two tier shelf
Which reveals the rock and DSB, and helps circulation
 

curator

Experienced Reefer
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Right now no, they have not been completed. I plan to though.

If you do a search hear you might be able to find the posts on
The project 1 through 3. I have one tank dedicated to sponge
Gorgonia and Dendronepthea is this I have one tray and open
PVC frame on one side where I zip ties Dendro’s upside down.
 

craw

Experienced Reefer
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I just got done reading them. Sounds like a very good set up. I look forward to seeing more pictures and progress! :)
 

curator

Experienced Reefer
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
thanks, for posting the links

i just got my #2 250 watt PFO pendants in today.
I tested one and the color and intensity is great
compared to the VHO's

I purchased the 12k sunburst bulbs, I had great
luck with Zoanthus before under that light (one
pictured above)

I also have a post coming up on a tank I set up
for Gorgs, Sponge and Dendronepthea, that one
should be fairly interesting to anyone whom is
interested in filter feeders.
 

Sponsor Reefs

We're a FREE website, and we exist because of hobbyists like YOU who help us run this community.

Click here to sponsor $10:


Top