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Thread: Fuge

  1. #1
    Join Date
    07-06-2005
    Location
    NW San Antonio (Near Sea World)
    Posts
    602

    Default Fuge

    I'm building a small fuge for my 55 galon. I'm going to have a small chamber for some live rock rubble, and the rest will be for live sand and macro algae. It's only about 9 inches tall because I don't have a lot of room to work with. I really just want a place to grow some macro algae for nutrient export. So here's my question...

    If I already have a 5-6 inch deep sand bed in the main tank, how much sand should I put in the fuge? If I go much more than 3 inches in the fuge, I'll only have about 4 1/2 inches or so of water in the fuge. Is this enough? Or, should I just keep a small layer of sand in the fuge (like an inch or so) and have a little more water?

    Any opinions would be appreciated.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    05-26-2004
    Location
    san marcos
    Posts
    1,060

    Default RE: Fuge

    sand is not nessecary in the fuge, i would just use rubble, and some chaeto, one of those CF lights from depot, and a small pump, just enough to keep the water moving a bit.
    abe
    60G cube, now planted amazon tank

  3. #3
    Join Date
    05-01-2006
    Location
    LagunaVista Tx
    Posts
    408

    Default RE: Fuge

    well, in my 10g fuge I have 20lbs in 1 section about 6-8 inches deep and a pice of rock a smashed with a hammer. but ever since that my levels are perfect
    29G Mixed tank, 380w of light (250w 14k Ushio, 2x65w PC Actinic), Octopus NW110, 75x turnover.

    Finally after years I have a tank worth showing!

  4. #4
    Join Date
    07-06-2005
    Location
    NW San Antonio (Near Sea World)
    Posts
    602

    Default RE: Fuge

    Actually, I'm not planning to use a pump. Everything will be gravity fed. I am going to put a T in the drain line from the overflow with a ball valve on the side that leads to the fuge. This way I can controll the amount of flow to the fuge, and whatever water that is not handled by the ball valve will back up and go into the sump through the other side of the T. The fuge will sit a higher than the sump so that water will over-flow through a bulkhead down into the sump. Then, the water from the fuge will mix with the water in the sump and be pumped back up to the tank through the return pump.

    I think I'll try a small layer of sand with the rubble. This way, I can always add more, or even take the sand out completely if I want to later. Nice to know it doesn't really matter, though. I know that my denitrification is going on in the main tank.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    03-04-2005
    Location
    NE San Antonio
    Posts
    11,696

    Default RE: Fuge

    the last step of the nitrogen cycle is the one that a deep sand bed will perform. chaeto will also get rid of nitrates. the live rock in your tank and the shallow sand bed do little nitrate to nitrogen conversion, so without a way of exporting the nitrates (like macroalgae) you may get a small buildup of nitrates. the reason a deep sand bed gets rid of them and a shallow one deosnt is, the deep sand bed allows for an anoxic zone for facultative bacteria to change nitrate to nitrogen. a shallow sand bed does not have an anoxic zone, so those same facultative bacteria will not change nitrate to nitrogen.
    Ace
    The Shade Tree Craftsman



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