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cyano

Tax time = equipment upgrade!

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For anyone who has not read any of my most recent posts (though most recent may still be a couple months old) I have been fighting with Caulerpa Toxifica and hair algae. I have done frequent water changes, water parameters check out good (with a test kit but I will hit on this subject again later), lighting is a few months old so still within spectrum, and I am close to hair falling out over the stress this is causing me lol. So now that everyone is caught up here is my thought process.
When I first started up my system two years ago my funds were running low so in one particular piece of equipment I went cheap when I shouldn’t have, my protein skimmer. I know hind sight is 20/20 but even at the time I knew I would be looking at an upgrade in the future but I was hoping to hold off as long as I could till maybe I had the funds to get what is needed rather than having to cheap out too badly again.
So on to the goods! I am looking at relocating my sump from under my tank to the other side of the wall giving me the necessary space to upgrade my equipment as well as provide the necessary space for proper care and maintenance to the sump area. I am also looking at expanding my sump to make it larger increasing my water volume in the system and giving me a real refugium. I plan on adding an additional tank that can be tied in to the original sump by teeing the inlet to the sump into both sumps and the new sump being connected by a bulk head into the old sump tied in at a higher level so that tank maintains the same water level and yet can still support a higher level if needed. With this set up my biggest question/issue is with the water maintaining the same level on that portion wouldn’t it be better to have the skimmer and equipment in it so that there is very minor tweaking and adjusting during operation due to water evaporation? Though if it is in that area and that area has lower water flow then the skimmer would not be as effective correct? This brings me to….
The new Skimmer which currently I am looking at a Reek Octopus 6” needle wheel skimmer rated for 150 gallons which is double my tank capacity. Will this be fine or should I be looking into a bigger skimmer? I am not trying to break the bank here but I am willing to dish out a little more if it will be better in the long run. Currently I am looking at 197.00 plus tax from my dealer for the skimmer and it is a non-recirculation skimmer. Total for this entire project I am looking to try to come in at $500.00 or less with my budget so keep that in mind with any suggestions please.
The one piece of equipment that I am going to be adding for the first time will be a bio-pellet reactor. Currently I am looking at a small hang on back (of the sump) reactor by Reef Octopus with a capacity of either 500ml or 1000ml bio pellets (undecided just because when it says max amount on some things it means get a bigger one if you will be maxing this one out.) With what I have read it seems that my water volume would require me to be using just under 500ml worth of bio-pellets which is why I am on the fence about which reactor to get. I will not be allowed by my wife to do any upgrading until I hit the lottery so keep that in mind as well. I will be using the vertex bio-pellets based on what I have read on here unless anyone has any other suggestions or recommendations. I came to the conclusion of adding this piece due to the fact that even though I am not reading positive with phosphates or nitrates does not mean they are not present and the algae and caulerpa are most likely devouring them for growth throwing off my tests.
I will gladly take any and all suggestions to consideration with this especially with the sump modifications as a lot of this will be uncharted territory for me. In fact as I type I am still pitching ideas to myself so I feel little headache coming on.

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Comments

  1. Blake's Avatar
    Im fighting briopsis myself in my tank and it sucks! post some pics of ur caulerpa
  2. matt_longview's Avatar
    I'd personally just go for 1 tank as the sump. Drilling two tanks, two bulkheads, two strainers and the space taken up by that stuff just seems like you could find 1 larger tank instead. I don't know the exact situation and area though.

    The skimmer sounds pretty good. Double what it's rated for is always a good thing. I've never personally used that skimmer, so I can't vouch for it... but reef octopus does seem to have a good reputation. :-)

    I started my biopellets two weeks ago. I'm still in the adding phase... so no real opinions yet, but I went with the NextReef SMR1 and it's serious quality. I've got a shorty reactor on a smaller tank as well.
  3. cyano's Avatar
    there you go Blake, sorry it's sideways and I took it with my phone but this is what keeps coming back and I yank it out and back it comes, I would show a bigger picture of it spreading in the tank but it is embarrassing to say the least

    matt- in my current mind configuration it would only be one bulkhead as it would tee from the overflow into both sumps simultaneously the the only bulkhead would run the water and dump it into the section with the return pump, but I still have several other options in consideration and just making one large sump is one of those

    Yeah I have never heard anything bad about reef octopus but at the same time I need to know 100% that I am getting what is going to be a good purchase, I have a guy nearby that deals fish and equipment out of his own house and is a reef octopus retailer so I can get that stuff a couple bucks lower than the internet price but with no shipping cost so it saves me money
  4. Midnight's Avatar
    Bryopsis is generally a sign of low magnesium, what is your mag level? Cyano do you have any tangs, or other vegetarians in the tank?
  5. cyano's Avatar
    my mag has always hovered around 1300, but yes I have a yellow tang but he only tends to nibble on the stuff when it is small after I recently have pulled a ton of it out otherwise he just kind of ignores it.
  6. melev's Avatar
    The skimmer and the 500ml biopellet reactor will do your tank a favor, that's for sure. In the end, it comes down to maintenance, which means keeping things clean.

    Few fish eat bryopsis -- the foxface is one that is known to do the job.
  7. Blake's Avatar
    what type of foxface tho? or do they all just eat it?
  8. melev's Avatar
    The yellow one for sure.
  9. cyano's Avatar
    thanks for the responses, I have finished ordering all of my equipment and upgrades and I will be posting pictures with a new blog of the new goodies so I did order the 6" Reef Octupus needlewheel skimmer but I changed the size of the bio pellet reactor to the 1000 ml (I know my system does not need that much) I will still only be using about 500 ml worth of bio pellets but I didn't want to max out the reactor with the 500 ml one and also I figured for only $15 more why not get the larger size just in case there was an upgrade in the future or additions.

    I also have coming in a new 35 gallon sump/refugium which will work much better than my current setup of a wet dry with choeto in it, 500 ml of Vertex bio pellets, and a JBJ auto top off system. Now that the plan is to have the sump on the other wise of the wall and I have the room for the proper equipment I have all intentions of getting this tank turned around and hopefully growing corals that were far out of reach before.

    All of my new equipment is on the way and it should start trickling in later this week, most everything should be here by the end of next week for sure and depending on my work schedule I hope to have everything together and running by next sunday at the soonest with the biopellet reactor and the new skimmer getting broken in.