dleblanc
New Member
I just went through all sorts of interesting puzzles designing the sump for my 180 I just got running in the last couple of weeks. The number one thing you want to figure out is how much rise you get in the tank level to manage the flow.
So just for example, I figured a 1.25" rise, the tank has an area of 1664 sq. inches, so that gives me 9 gallons. Then some portion of the overflow will drain into the sump. Next, figure out how to run your returns so that they don't become siphons. And add in a bit for the water in the pipes.
The total here is the volume of water that the sump takes between pump off and pump on. If you don't have enough volume in your sump, then you don't have much room for water loss before your pumps run dry. In mine, I have 20 gallons between the non-emergency high water mark and the low water mark. I just put a little pump in the sump, let it pump out the water for water changes, which now happen completely in the sump, fish don't even know anything happened.
I have a weird 3 door stand, and don't have access from the sides. I had to do a whole bunch of funky design to get this to work. If you have a stand that allows you to just slide something in underneath, you can just use a plain glass aquarium and save yourself a lot of money and pain.
Something else - it is highly unlikely that the pump(s) will put out exactly the amount of water you want, so make sure to put a valve upstream of the pump. I have learned from the school of hard knocks that a cheap $10 valve sticks and is hard to get right. A $20 gate valve is a _much_ better option.
I just went through all this, happy to share what I did, lessons learned etc. Got lots of help from Cory, who is awesome.
So just for example, I figured a 1.25" rise, the tank has an area of 1664 sq. inches, so that gives me 9 gallons. Then some portion of the overflow will drain into the sump. Next, figure out how to run your returns so that they don't become siphons. And add in a bit for the water in the pipes.
The total here is the volume of water that the sump takes between pump off and pump on. If you don't have enough volume in your sump, then you don't have much room for water loss before your pumps run dry. In mine, I have 20 gallons between the non-emergency high water mark and the low water mark. I just put a little pump in the sump, let it pump out the water for water changes, which now happen completely in the sump, fish don't even know anything happened.
I have a weird 3 door stand, and don't have access from the sides. I had to do a whole bunch of funky design to get this to work. If you have a stand that allows you to just slide something in underneath, you can just use a plain glass aquarium and save yourself a lot of money and pain.
Something else - it is highly unlikely that the pump(s) will put out exactly the amount of water you want, so make sure to put a valve upstream of the pump. I have learned from the school of hard knocks that a cheap $10 valve sticks and is hard to get right. A $20 gate valve is a _much_ better option.
I just went through all this, happy to share what I did, lessons learned etc. Got lots of help from Cory, who is awesome.