Oh... I'll have to go look for that. Appreciate the insight on that.Lol most all these ideas are being repeated from the original thread of this tank plus a few more !
I'm not too concerned about the drilling. I'm fairly confident I could handle that. I think I'm going to go that route anyway now. Dual pumps and returns.But then you have to come over the top or drill for the returns. Me personally, I hate the look of over the top return lines. Also, I like not having a fat internal overflow box taking up tank real estate.
I do agree with you about the bulky overflow boxes. Not ideal. Saving a couple hundred $ though for other equipment... that will likely be the deciding factor. If @a.little.hypertonic wants it gone, then it will be getting ripped out and I'll be shopping for an external overflow box. LOL For a couple hundred bucks, I can deal with losing a little real estate. It could be utilized as a cool growing wall too.
That's a great idea. How about those BioBricks?You can also reduce the risk of that, by reducing the water volume in the return section. A trick I've used is put live rock in that return section. A pump isn't going to suck up a rock, so that effectively reduces the return water volume by displacing water out.
Thanks for all your insight btw. As much planning on the plumbing is the plan. So your wisdom is much appreciated!I personally wouldn't go ball valve and I wouldn’t set up a bean animal on this size tank. But admittedly, if there’s one thing I’m OCD about, it’s plumbing.
So why not the bean animal drain? If I'm going to end up drilling 3/4" returns on each side, I won't be using the holes.
Also, I understand your logic about if the main drain gets clogged, and the small drain cannot handle the flow, then I'd have a large issue. But I'm having a hard time envisioning a 1.5" drain line getting clogged. From what?! Forgive my ignorance. But I'd rather have a larger drain from the start.
I had a thought about testing what you're saying though. What if I filled the tank and set it up to drain out of a small hole, and have the other ones ready in case it can't handle it. Confirm if it can or cannot handle the full flow in an emergency. If it is able to handle the flow, then using the larger pipe as the main drain would be better right? Then just setup the other two as a secondary and emergency?
The emergency would require both the primary and secondary getting clogged. And again I ask, from what? I'm sorry if that seems like a silly question. I'm just not sure what could cause that kind of blockage.
I'm assuming an Apex or Hydros is needed for something like that? Cause that doesn't sound simple! LOLCan always have return pump connected to float switches/ magnetic sensors one in sump other in display that turns return pump off for low water in sump and high flood levels in display.. just keep it a simple low maintenance tank