This is a little fun project I've been doing in my home office. It started out as a little coral quarantine tank (which I've had multiple bouts of issues with), and slowly has evolved into a project tank because I enjoy looking at it at while working.
Humble Beginnings
Initially this was just a bare bottom 10 gallon with an extra AI Prime I had, a little HOB Aquaclear with some seeded ceramic media, a Jebao powerhead (SW-20 maybe?), and an Eheim Heater. I used it to quarantine a couple frags, and some fish. To give the fish a hiding place I started with some random plastic plants in there. You also can sort of see in the back of the tank a plastic water jug I was using to culture some pods.
Frags and Robo-Tank / Reef-Pi DIY Controller
Eventually I tossed in a LifeRock and used it to hold a big mess of frags I got from @H2OPlayar. Sooo many frags:
I also had 3d printed a little frag holder stand, which was a huge PITA to use. It was too flimsy, floaty, and not really useful, but I used it anyway. Most of those frags are actually doing great in my main tank now, though the green and yellow plating montis I just cannot keep happy.
Next up I made some upgrades. I swapped the underpowered, leaking water, Aquaclear HOB with a Tidal 35 I got off FB Marketplace along with 2 fish and a rose bubbletip anemone all for $20 or so.
I also finally gave in and decided to try my hand at a computer, so I bought a robo-tank setup and began playing with reef-pi. The main reason was because I always wanted to DIY a controller back in the day when I first was in the hobby. The secondary reason was I wanted to monitor the temperature with a graph, because that office gets cold at night and can get really hot during the day. The third reason was given it's so small, and was going to hold corals, I really needed an ATO. I figured all-in, the reef-pi would be not too much more expensive than alternatives, and be a fun project.
Overall I'd say reef-pi is kind of janky, but it's an interesting little hobby toy. It could be better with some changes, and hopefully I'll get some time to submit some pull requests to help.
For ATO I initially was using some a cheap $16 ITTLLAB peristaltic pump from amazon powered by the reef-pi. I have an optical sensor in the tank. When it stops detecting water the reef-pi sends power (+24v currently) to the peristaltic pump, which is pulling water from a jug. These pumps are garbage, but it does what I need. I also have a mechanical float switch which in theory is a backup to disable the pump, but recently I tested it and it's always on, so I need to replace it with another backup.
Almost Disaster
I did have an almost disaster once, where I had a lot of whitening than bleaching. Well, it turns out using an old Kh solution bottle as your top-off isn't a great idea. Not because it had anything in it, but because then it looks exactly like your Ca solution bottle. Guess which of these two bottles I was using for a week as a top-off.
So yes, I was topping off for about a week with Ca solution. I couldn't figure out why the heck everything seemed to be crashing. That was dumb. I still am using the Kh bottle to hold RODI for top-off, but I removed the label at least.
DIY Peristaltic Pumps
Jumping ahead, I started swapping out and DIY'ing things, trying channel @thesassyindian. First off, I started upgrading the peristaltic pumps I was using for an ATO. The cheapo ones I bought were super loud and had a lot of plastic on plastic drag so they could only run at high rpms. I looked around, and it turns out Kamoer both sells fancy dosing pumps and also sells their peristaltic pump motors for $10 on amazon. I bought one of those motors, and first put one in the INTLLAB box. That worked a lot better, so I decided to buy a couple more and create some DIY peristaltic pumps.
The case is 3d printed, with this version being a design I found online. I've since switched to a v2 case I designed which looks better. The pump is the Kamoer. There's a toggle switch for turning it on/off, and a PWM voltage controller for adjusting the speed. While this could be used for dosing through the reef-pi, since I'm right now just using it for ATO. It works pretty well, but it certainly isn't all-in cheaper than just buying one, especially if you do want it to dose and therefore you need a controller. Fun project though. I learned a lot.
To Be Continued
Next time I'll write up the steps that took me to the current state, and introduce the Up Sump. Here's a WIP shot of the current state, and a little video in case anyone's interested.
Also, since my kids love blooper reels, I leave you with this collection of "5.5 gallon tanks are a nightmare to drill, thank goodness for Petco 50% off sales":
Humble Beginnings
Initially this was just a bare bottom 10 gallon with an extra AI Prime I had, a little HOB Aquaclear with some seeded ceramic media, a Jebao powerhead (SW-20 maybe?), and an Eheim Heater. I used it to quarantine a couple frags, and some fish. To give the fish a hiding place I started with some random plastic plants in there. You also can sort of see in the back of the tank a plastic water jug I was using to culture some pods.
Frags and Robo-Tank / Reef-Pi DIY Controller
Eventually I tossed in a LifeRock and used it to hold a big mess of frags I got from @H2OPlayar. Sooo many frags:
I also had 3d printed a little frag holder stand, which was a huge PITA to use. It was too flimsy, floaty, and not really useful, but I used it anyway. Most of those frags are actually doing great in my main tank now, though the green and yellow plating montis I just cannot keep happy.
Next up I made some upgrades. I swapped the underpowered, leaking water, Aquaclear HOB with a Tidal 35 I got off FB Marketplace along with 2 fish and a rose bubbletip anemone all for $20 or so.
I also finally gave in and decided to try my hand at a computer, so I bought a robo-tank setup and began playing with reef-pi. The main reason was because I always wanted to DIY a controller back in the day when I first was in the hobby. The secondary reason was I wanted to monitor the temperature with a graph, because that office gets cold at night and can get really hot during the day. The third reason was given it's so small, and was going to hold corals, I really needed an ATO. I figured all-in, the reef-pi would be not too much more expensive than alternatives, and be a fun project.
Overall I'd say reef-pi is kind of janky, but it's an interesting little hobby toy. It could be better with some changes, and hopefully I'll get some time to submit some pull requests to help.
For ATO I initially was using some a cheap $16 ITTLLAB peristaltic pump from amazon powered by the reef-pi. I have an optical sensor in the tank. When it stops detecting water the reef-pi sends power (+24v currently) to the peristaltic pump, which is pulling water from a jug. These pumps are garbage, but it does what I need. I also have a mechanical float switch which in theory is a backup to disable the pump, but recently I tested it and it's always on, so I need to replace it with another backup.
Almost Disaster
I did have an almost disaster once, where I had a lot of whitening than bleaching. Well, it turns out using an old Kh solution bottle as your top-off isn't a great idea. Not because it had anything in it, but because then it looks exactly like your Ca solution bottle. Guess which of these two bottles I was using for a week as a top-off.
So yes, I was topping off for about a week with Ca solution. I couldn't figure out why the heck everything seemed to be crashing. That was dumb. I still am using the Kh bottle to hold RODI for top-off, but I removed the label at least.
DIY Peristaltic Pumps
Jumping ahead, I started swapping out and DIY'ing things, trying channel @thesassyindian. First off, I started upgrading the peristaltic pumps I was using for an ATO. The cheapo ones I bought were super loud and had a lot of plastic on plastic drag so they could only run at high rpms. I looked around, and it turns out Kamoer both sells fancy dosing pumps and also sells their peristaltic pump motors for $10 on amazon. I bought one of those motors, and first put one in the INTLLAB box. That worked a lot better, so I decided to buy a couple more and create some DIY peristaltic pumps.
The case is 3d printed, with this version being a design I found online. I've since switched to a v2 case I designed which looks better. The pump is the Kamoer. There's a toggle switch for turning it on/off, and a PWM voltage controller for adjusting the speed. While this could be used for dosing through the reef-pi, since I'm right now just using it for ATO. It works pretty well, but it certainly isn't all-in cheaper than just buying one, especially if you do want it to dose and therefore you need a controller. Fun project though. I learned a lot.
To Be Continued
Next time I'll write up the steps that took me to the current state, and introduce the Up Sump. Here's a WIP shot of the current state, and a little video in case anyone's interested.
Also, since my kids love blooper reels, I leave you with this collection of "5.5 gallon tanks are a nightmare to drill, thank goodness for Petco 50% off sales":