Biggest mistake I've made in years

corey.nolta

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Well I'm on my way home after purchasing a 90 gallon tank with a 40 gallon sump. And ALL the equipment needed. And all I can think right now is "what the heck did I just do??"

I'm going from a 60 gallon no sump to a 90 gallon with sump.

The larger tank size isn't my concern. It's the sump . And everything involved with it. There is so much plumbing.

I'm panicking and I'm having major buyers remorse. And don't know how to proceed because there is no returning. Overwhelmed is putting it mildly.

Yours truly-
Panicked reefer
 
You are gonna love having a sump! Just take your time with plumbing and carefully plan it all out. Doing the plumbing is my favorite part about setting up a reef tank/sump combo. Besides, you have this great forum as a resource if you have any questions.
 
The dump is really nice. You put your heater there. You put your skimmer in it or can do so. You can stick in all sorts of stuff and it is all out of sight.
 
The plumbing is not all that hard to figure out. I did and my greatest technical skill is knitting socks. There is tons of help on YouTube, not to mention the one on one you can get here. So many been there done that people. Buyers remorse is more for buying ponies or puppies. Reef stuff is never regrettable.
 
Drain line. Skimmer. Fuge if you have one with heater. Ruturn line up. Pretty simple after this you will never run a tank without some kind of sump.
 
I also use flexible silicon tubing not pvc do much easier. Just fit and clamp. Have fun.
 
If you use flexible tubing, the lines are pretty easy to set up. If you want rigid plumbing, you can go full DIY or for a modest sum hire someone to hook it all up.
 
Plumbing is easy definitely don't worry. Just buy the right tools and your good. I always do rigid plumbing as I like the way it looks but soft lines work fine. No matter what you do I recommend drawing it out first to give your self an idea of what is going on. And if you choose to go rigid measure twice cut once. Goodluck
 
you'll be fine, it seems like a lot but a 60 to a 90 isn't that big of a jump
 
Everything went really well. I don't think I'll run the sump until tomorrow. Nervous about leaving it running all night unsupervised.

Another question. The tank came with two Yello tangs. I already had a Yellow tang. Three tangs in a 90? Thoughts?
 
Three better than two for schooling reasons
 
Make sure you do more than one drain! Because having one drain can run the risk of a flood if a snail get stuck . Also make your plumbing simple and easy to maintenance. Good luck
 
It has two nice sites drains. Also what about clownfish. Ocellaris to be exact. I have a bonded pair. And the tank came with one. Will that be okay in a 90? If not, will it be okay for the time being til I figure something else out?
 
It has two nice sites drains. Also what about clownfish. Ocellaris to be exact. I have a bonded pair. And the tank came with one. Will that be okay in a 90? If not, will it be okay for the time being til I figure something else out?
I would bet your bonded pair would kill the third. You could put the third one in the sump until it can be rehomed.
 
Well I'm on my way home after purchasing a 90 gallon tank with a 40 gallon sump. And ALL the equipment needed. And all I can think right now is "what the heck did I just do??"

I'm going from a 60 gallon no sump to a 90 gallon with sump.

The larger tank size isn't my concern. It's the sump . And everything involved with it. There is so much plumbing.

I'm panicking and I'm having major buyers remorse. And don't know how to proceed because there is no returning. Overwhelmed is putting it mildly.

Yours truly-
Panicked reefer

Suck it up buttercup! You'll be better for it.
 
Out of all the comments, I think @timkenagy, yours was the best! Lol. I say that all the time.
The whole process was a touch and go at times but everything seems to be looking fine this morning! I have a feeling I'll lose some of my corals. Between moving some equipment over, and then moving the corals themselves. There was a pretty nice temp drop. Luckily the ones I'm worried about are mainly small frags, so if that's the worst that happens in this whole upgrade, I'm okay with that.
I'll be starting a new thread with some pictures, I didn't take many through the building process last night as I just wanted to get the tank set and everything moved over. Today I'm focusing on the sump and getting that filled, the tank topped off, and then making sure flow is right and that the levels in both tanks stays the same.

Here's a sample pic from this morning. Water is a tad cloudy still, carbon will start running here this morning so that should clear up nicely. Things are still a little messy at the moment, but once I get everything situated then I can come back and tiddy things up.
Thoughts, opinions? Look okay?

20160118_080615.jpg

Sump break down (previous owner's design-I just "plugged and play" kinda thing)-Starting on the right... Two drains from tank, overflows baffle into filter socks, into skimmer chamber, skimmer output into fuge, flows over/under baffles, return line to tank. The return line then has a t off into a reactor with the output line going back into sump....Sounda about right? Sumps are new to me and I know there are many ways to do them.
Thanks again guys and gals!
 
Atleast you have yours up @corey.nolta . I bought a great deal ensemble 65g on Black Friday and I have not even started it. I have 29g that I have been planning to transfer but I can't figure out the drilling part, overflow, return pump and plumbing.
I still have couple weeks to return the 65g at LFS.
 
Looking good.
Have a question about your sump though.. Those baffles look kinda high to me.. Do they have slots cut in them? Or maybe allow water under them, instead of over..

When your return pump turns off, will you have enough room for the water in the tank to drain from the overflow and return lines?

Personally, I would want a little more room than that as a safeguard. There is enough head room in my sump for the ATO to malfunction and dump all the water and then still hold the water that would drain from the display in a power failure.. I have an extremely low risk tolerance though, so maybe someone else will chime in..
 

IF YOU HAD TO TAKE A REEFING EXAM, WOULD YOU PASS?

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