Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
WHOA. DUDE. That is so cool.You can always build your own. Have a glass shop cut some 1/4" plate glass and make your sump fit your enclosure. Here is a small sump that I built from scratch for a 7 gallon nano that I had. I got the main part of the glass cut at my local glass shop and I cut all of the smaller pieces from scraps of old DIY projects.
Oh, wow. That tank looks amazing! About carbon, is saltwater and freshwater carbon pellets different?I only used a small bag of carbon underneath the filter pad. You can see it at the lower right of the bottom picture (in my first post). I had a large skimmer that I used on this tank (about 10 times overkill). I used chaeto in the refugium.
This was the tank on top of it... Dimensions 20" x 8.5" x 10". I also built the tank.
I use the ROX 0.8 from BRS or the Reef-Spec Carbon from Red Sea. Never even looked at the fresh water carbon, so I can't say.Oh, wow. That tank looks amazing! About carbon, is saltwater and freshwater carbon pellets different?
Well, I basically bought an 8 gallon GEX tank. Bought some sand and rocks, put them in, scape them. Then I bought one jug of saltwater mix, a HOB filter, powerhead. After that, I poured the water into the tank and let ot cycle for 2 months while doing phantom feeding. Added fish, coral, inverts and then I realized, I NEED MORE FILTRATION. So, I bought this 5 gallon tank today with a 5 watt led and a return pump. I am planning on making a few sections with the baffles, one for mechanical and chemical filtration, another chamber for refugium with sand, live rock, and some macroalgae ( Probably Chaeto ). And the last one for the return pump and probably a DIY Protein Skimmer. I came to this forum so I can get some advice from the people here.Would you mind posting step by step detailed instructions and pics? Pretty sure my son wants to eventually do a sump for the 8g biocube and go topless with it.
Is this good enough?
Anybody here ever built a DIY Protein Skimmer before? Can you give me some details and instruction on how to build it? Anyway, thanks.
Thanks!! I'm actually going to put two baffles so I can have one more chamber for mechanical and chemical filtration if I wanted to.This is awesome, I love it!
So next up, you need to build out that fancy overflow apparatus, please keep us post with that!
Also, you will likely want at least one baffle in that sump. I would have the overflow go directly into the fuge chamber. When your Chaeto grows, it should block the micro bubbles made (caused) by the overflow, then put your ATO in the return pump chamber.
When planning the height for the baffle. keep in mind the water volume in the overflow plumbing (you need to 'reserver' that space for when the pump turns off). I buy my glass from a local distributor, look for "Glass and Mirror" shops who do custom cuts... Worse case, look for 'float glass' resellers.
I'll probably try making one with PVC or plastic bottles. Joey's video about making DIY Protein Skimmer gave me some inspiration. I have one question though, is wider PVC better then smaller diameter but taller PVC?Tanks with this little water volume almost require frequent water changes. This will negate the need to skim... However, a DIY skimmer for a tank this small requires a strong bubbler (aim for over 3 watts), a couple air stones and a collection cup. There are plenty of Youtube videos about this, you would just need to scale it down. What I do for my 1 gallon (which its flow is entirely done with a bubble), is let the bubbles skim on their own and just clean the rim of the glass when I do a water change...
Does that make sense?
Does this mean if he ran a slightly larger sump with a Skimmer it further reduces the need for water changes because I would take that option every day of the week. Optional less maintenance is my kind of aquarium.Neat idea. Have you picked a return pump yet? If you choose well, you may not need a powerhead in the DT. I would not go for anything larger than 200 GPH. I have a 100 in my 5.5 and it is perfect (sumpless).
Otherwise, you will need a fuge light, and plumbing. Given the small tank size, you would not need a skimmer or reactors if you do regular water changes. Thus, you could probably only get away with two chambers in the sump.
For the tank itself, I would look at small rectangular beta tanks, then buy a piece of glass from your local glass shop to fit at the baffle.
Lastly, you will want to look into an ATO, especially if you are using a sump. You can go cheap, using float switches, a relay and a $20 aqualifter dosing pump, or buy an ATO system; either will work for you.
It's possible, yeah. However, before that can really be answered: Why are you doing water changes?Does this mean if he ran a slightly larger sump with a Skimmer it further reduces the need for water changes because I would take that option every day of the week. Optional less maintenance is my kind of aquarium.