Hi everyone,
New to the site and recently got excited about the idea of reef keeping. My cute beta fish managed to get himself stuck under a little rock and suffocated. So sad. I eventually went to the local pet store to look for another one. Well, they moved the betas down to the tropical fish area (they used to be upstairs in the front, so I'd never really gone downstairs to see all the tropical fish). Well, once I started watching all those marine fish and corals, I was captivated. I've been doing research for a few weeks now and I have a few ideas to vet with the experts...
Here's my current plan:
Tank will be a Mr. Aqua Serene 12g long - picked this up at Manhattan Aquariums.
It'll be on a credenza that has space for a 10g fuge/sump, which I'm putting in a regular cheap Aqueon 10g that was $10 at Petland.
I'm planning to drill the tank on the left side (which I'm a little nervous about, but we'll cross that bridge later).
I'm trying to keep this as clean as possible, so my initial plan for the tank is to have 2 bulkheads - 1" drain and 1/" return from the sump which will be roughly 2 feet below the tank. Connection will go through a hole cut into the back of the credenza
As far as the ideas for the inhabitants... I'd like to start with a clown and anemone and maybe some of the clean-up crew shrimp/snails. Later I'd like to add a mandarin and some coral. Eventually, perhaps another 1-2 fish. I don't want it too crowded, and I don't want the bio load to be unreasonably high for the modest tank volume.
For the sump, I was thinking of starting with some poly filter or a sock at the inflow, then some space for a possible future little skimmer, followed by room for a block of MarinePure, and then a section for some chaetomorpha and hopefully a nice little copepod colony over live sand, finishing up with a section for the return pump.
What? That sounds like too many sections... Now here's my big question for the sump. Since my tank will only connect at one end, and to keep all the plumbing cleaner, I thought maybe a sump/fuge can have both the inflow and return pump on one end with the water flowing in a U using an acrylic center divider.
Has anyone ever done anything like this? I haven't been able to find any designs along these lines, so I'm not sure if it's just a new idea, or so stupid that nobody has ever posted anything like it.
Sorry for the primitive drawing, but I didn't have a scanner to import my sketches. I may need to enlarge the pump section by an inch, depending on which model I end up selecting. But given my current dimensions, that allows roughly 2.25 gallons for the chaeto section and another 1.75 for the MarinePure area. Not sure if this is all broken up too small - perhaps it would be better to combine those two into one 4 gallon bay? Total estimated volume of the sump will probably be 6.5-7 gallons.
Also, as I don't intend to put a skimmer in from the start - any recommendations on how best to use that space in the meantime?
Anyway, hoping for some feedback on whether or not that sump design makes sense. I'm thinking of going for about 200gph of flow, which may sound like a lot for a 12g tank, but since it's so long, I figure the water turnover may not be as efficient coming from one end - especially on the right side of the tank. Also, I'm hoping to avoid powerheads (again, trying to keep it clean up top) and get enough flow from the return pump through a flow accelerator (perhaps a spinner/wave type).
Thanks in advance!
New to the site and recently got excited about the idea of reef keeping. My cute beta fish managed to get himself stuck under a little rock and suffocated. So sad. I eventually went to the local pet store to look for another one. Well, they moved the betas down to the tropical fish area (they used to be upstairs in the front, so I'd never really gone downstairs to see all the tropical fish). Well, once I started watching all those marine fish and corals, I was captivated. I've been doing research for a few weeks now and I have a few ideas to vet with the experts...
Here's my current plan:
Tank will be a Mr. Aqua Serene 12g long - picked this up at Manhattan Aquariums.
It'll be on a credenza that has space for a 10g fuge/sump, which I'm putting in a regular cheap Aqueon 10g that was $10 at Petland.
I'm planning to drill the tank on the left side (which I'm a little nervous about, but we'll cross that bridge later).
I'm trying to keep this as clean as possible, so my initial plan for the tank is to have 2 bulkheads - 1" drain and 1/" return from the sump which will be roughly 2 feet below the tank. Connection will go through a hole cut into the back of the credenza
As far as the ideas for the inhabitants... I'd like to start with a clown and anemone and maybe some of the clean-up crew shrimp/snails. Later I'd like to add a mandarin and some coral. Eventually, perhaps another 1-2 fish. I don't want it too crowded, and I don't want the bio load to be unreasonably high for the modest tank volume.
For the sump, I was thinking of starting with some poly filter or a sock at the inflow, then some space for a possible future little skimmer, followed by room for a block of MarinePure, and then a section for some chaetomorpha and hopefully a nice little copepod colony over live sand, finishing up with a section for the return pump.
What? That sounds like too many sections... Now here's my big question for the sump. Since my tank will only connect at one end, and to keep all the plumbing cleaner, I thought maybe a sump/fuge can have both the inflow and return pump on one end with the water flowing in a U using an acrylic center divider.
Has anyone ever done anything like this? I haven't been able to find any designs along these lines, so I'm not sure if it's just a new idea, or so stupid that nobody has ever posted anything like it.
Sorry for the primitive drawing, but I didn't have a scanner to import my sketches. I may need to enlarge the pump section by an inch, depending on which model I end up selecting. But given my current dimensions, that allows roughly 2.25 gallons for the chaeto section and another 1.75 for the MarinePure area. Not sure if this is all broken up too small - perhaps it would be better to combine those two into one 4 gallon bay? Total estimated volume of the sump will probably be 6.5-7 gallons.
Also, as I don't intend to put a skimmer in from the start - any recommendations on how best to use that space in the meantime?
Anyway, hoping for some feedback on whether or not that sump design makes sense. I'm thinking of going for about 200gph of flow, which may sound like a lot for a 12g tank, but since it's so long, I figure the water turnover may not be as efficient coming from one end - especially on the right side of the tank. Also, I'm hoping to avoid powerheads (again, trying to keep it clean up top) and get enough flow from the return pump through a flow accelerator (perhaps a spinner/wave type).
Thanks in advance!