caferacermike
Thu, 29th Mar 2007, 04:37 PM
I finally have my new tank here in ATX. It is a 380g acrylic, used to be Z28's tank. The plan is to have about 800g of total water volume between sump, fuge, tank, and skimmer (holds about 20g itself). I still have some major purchases ahead.
Today I'm shopping for: EXTERNAL PUMPS
I'm looking at getting a couple of pumps to run my sump and closed loop if I run a closed loop. I've heard great things about Sequence. I was also told great things about Ampmaster, especially nice on the wallet once a month. But I've also heard that older Ampmasters had seal issues that may or may not have been fixed.
The plan. I'm thinking about running something in the 2-3,000GPH range for the sump/fuge. I personally think that might pull water through the sump way to fast to be effective but I've read and met a few tank owners running them like this. Looking for feedback. The plan is to T off to my skimmer as well, then return the output back to the beginning of the sump/fuge. This will mean that only about 1,000GPH should fall back into the sump from the display and just recirculate the water in the sump/fuge a few times maybe making it work better. The closed loop part may or may not be a reality. I'm still trying to decide. I really like the simplicity of just buying a few controllable Tunze streams in the 3-5,000GPH range and having the ability to place them where needed instead of guessing with a closed loop and being stuck with what ever happens like blown sand. I REALLY REALLY drool over the Tunze wavebox to help break the flow up and make random currents.
1. What do you large tank guys think about my sump idea? To much flow to quickly?
2. What brands of external pumps are the majority of you satisfied with? Sequence seems to be the front runner. Also what pump make as that can change with manufacturer as well.
3. Closed loop with a 5,000GPH pump and around 2-300w or power consumption per hour or 4 Tunze controllable streams at around 15,000GPH for the same wattage?
I'm looking for reliability, ease of use, and especially power consumption. I'm afraid I won't be able to afford the electricity once thise thing is running.
I'm planning on a full reef set up so flow is important.
Today I'm shopping for: EXTERNAL PUMPS
I'm looking at getting a couple of pumps to run my sump and closed loop if I run a closed loop. I've heard great things about Sequence. I was also told great things about Ampmaster, especially nice on the wallet once a month. But I've also heard that older Ampmasters had seal issues that may or may not have been fixed.
The plan. I'm thinking about running something in the 2-3,000GPH range for the sump/fuge. I personally think that might pull water through the sump way to fast to be effective but I've read and met a few tank owners running them like this. Looking for feedback. The plan is to T off to my skimmer as well, then return the output back to the beginning of the sump/fuge. This will mean that only about 1,000GPH should fall back into the sump from the display and just recirculate the water in the sump/fuge a few times maybe making it work better. The closed loop part may or may not be a reality. I'm still trying to decide. I really like the simplicity of just buying a few controllable Tunze streams in the 3-5,000GPH range and having the ability to place them where needed instead of guessing with a closed loop and being stuck with what ever happens like blown sand. I REALLY REALLY drool over the Tunze wavebox to help break the flow up and make random currents.
1. What do you large tank guys think about my sump idea? To much flow to quickly?
2. What brands of external pumps are the majority of you satisfied with? Sequence seems to be the front runner. Also what pump make as that can change with manufacturer as well.
3. Closed loop with a 5,000GPH pump and around 2-300w or power consumption per hour or 4 Tunze controllable streams at around 15,000GPH for the same wattage?
I'm looking for reliability, ease of use, and especially power consumption. I'm afraid I won't be able to afford the electricity once thise thing is running.
I'm planning on a full reef set up so flow is important.