High Tide Aquatics

LF HOB overflows and opinions

The biggest concern is the siphon tube getting blocked by a snail or something else and then your siphon breaks. I have made my lid of my tank so that nothing from the DT can get into the weir box unless it can fit through the weirs.

But if your tank can hold the excess amount of water from your return chamber and you sump can hold all the water than siphons down from flow being off then I don't really see any issue.

Getting the return pump water level consistent is the only hurdle in your specific setup and once that is solved then you should have a smooth/safe running HOB overflow setup.

I am going to add one more safety to mine in addition to my low water level cutoff switch for the return chamber. I will add a high level safety switch to shut off the pump if the water level in my external overflow box gets too high. For my specific setup that should cover all possible flooding situations. My 1in gate valve has to be closed down pretty far (wish I went with a 3/4in drain line) so clogging/reduced flow can happen over time pretty easily I presume which would cause the water level in the external side of the HOB to rise.
I do have an in tank backup float to ensure if my tank level gets too high my ATO disables, but having one for the pump is a good idea too. I have the floats available, and my pump is on a smart outlet I can control from my reef pi, so I might as well do that. Doing it also in the hob overflow compartment by daisy chaining two floats together should be pretty easy too.
 
If algae or a snail blocks part of the return line, then you can overpower the drain with the return pump. In your case, not a problem. Like I said I had mine on a 10g tank which has almost no margin for error!

V
Thanks for the clarification. I assumed my case was safer than others, but so many people bring up the flood risk I've been very confused that maybe I'm missing something.
 
Ooof, well this is embarrassing... I think I found my issue. I think my u-tube hasn't been locked in place. I think it sometimes moves slightly, which then leads to the bottom of the tube getting closer/further from the bottom of the in-tank overflow box. That then leads to a bit of resistance to the water flow, which leads to the hang on back reservoir's water level rising a bit or lowering a bit.

That then leads to water draining faster/slower, which then leads to the return section being slightly higher or lower, which then leads to the ATO.

Last night I fixed this by using some double sided tape to make sure it doesn't move, and since then it's been super stable.

Hopefully it continues, but that was silly.

I've also realized I have it setup slightly wrong. I have the acrylic overhang sitting inside the box versus in front of it.

eshopps-overflow-box-pf-800__85023__72360.1594420289.jpg


So the setup should be (awful ascii art):
Code:
                            =======     =
+              |          | = +    =     =
+  tank        | overflow | = +    =     =
+              |          |   +    =     =
+               ----------    +    =     =
+                             +     =====
+                             +
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

But I had:

Code:
                           =========     =
+              |          =|  +    =     =
+  tank        | overflow =|  +    =     =
+              |           |  +    =     =
+               -----------   +    =     =
+                             +     =====
+                             +
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Which is likely why the u-tube can move.
 
A day later, smoothest run of this thing so far. Hopefully figured it out.

Also fwiw this thing is setup dead silent. Part of the reason is this Maggie muffler I installed that I got from when I emptied out @bondolo's garage.

3piecekit2.jpg


Works great. Just lucked out that I happened to have that, and looks better than building one out of ace hardware piping and definitely easier than trying to 3d print one.
 
A day later, smoothest run of this thing so far. Hopefully figured it out.

Also fwiw this thing is setup dead silent. Part of the reason is this Maggie muffler I installed that I got from when I emptied out @bondolo's garage.

View attachment 45019

Works great. Just lucked out that I happened to have that, and looks better than building one out of ace hardware piping and definitely easier than trying to 3d print one.
That Maggie Muffler looks like a productized "Stockman Standpipe", which in itself is a variation of the "Durso Standpipe", all self named by the people who came up with them.
I do like that the Maggie Muffler has an angled intake, that makes a lot of sense!

Heck, even AGA/Oceanic's "Megaflow" overflows used a version of the Durso standpipe, but purpose made and not made from PVC plumbing parts!


V
 
Wrapping this thread up, yesterday I drilled the tank. I just couldn't get the return section to have a stable level of water in it with the hang on the back. My guess is my return pump just isn't consistent (jebao dcp), and fluctuations in its output was leading to changes.

With the single drain HOB it was impossible to set it up such that it was both quiet and self-regulating. My guess is that a 2-3 drain HOB would've worked fine, but at that point it was the same cost to buy a drilled overflow. I also didn't want to keep debating in my head if the problem was the HOB'ness or the pump or whatever. Drilling removed one more variable that I have to worry about.

I ran to Neptune, picked up an eshopps eclipse M, and drilled the tank. Drilling went very well, and was much easier on this glass than the previous rounds where I drilled 5-10 gallon tanks. Next time I'll probably just do that from the start, as was recommended here.
 
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