2.5L Pico Reef Concept (Lots of 3D Printing)
I will be documenting the development, successes and failures of my 2.5L Pico Reef Concept aquarium here with you all. It will be a long process, but I personally enjoy the challenge.
The aquarium will be a 15 x 15 x 15cm cube ( 6x6x6” ) which is 3.3L or 0.85 gallons. The internal measurements however are closer to 14cm and I won’t have the water level all the way to the very top. Therefore:
14 x 14 x 13cm = 2.54L, so 2.5L
Multiple aspects of this build will be custom. These include:
3D Printed Pump
3D Printed Rock scape
3D Printed Stand
3D Printed Lid
3D Printed gravity fed auto top up with 3D printed float valve
DIY Aquarium Heater
Fan Cooling
DIY LED Light Fixture
Heating, Cooling, Lighting and flow are to all be controlled by a micro controller to make the process of running a Pico aquarium as simple as possible. These functions will be:
(1) Heating Aquarium to Temperature target
The controller will run a heating element until a desired temperature is reached. A Thermistor will be used and the circuit will be adjusted to try and achieve as stable temperature reading as possible, to flatten out variances in temperature.
(2) Cooling Aquarium to Temperature target
Same as above. Once an upper temperature threshold is reached, a fan will be powered on to cool the aquarium down
(3) Lighting going on and off based on internal background light levels
I don’t suspect many people would be great at remembering to turn on and off the lights on a Pico reef aquarium. With the aquarium planning to run more hardy coral options, the controller will detect the ambient light levels. Once natural light is detected, it will turn on the lights. When the rooms lights go off at night, it will naturally follow this. An override switch will be available if not desired.
(4) Pump Regulation
The 3D Printed pump will be capable of creating a small standing wave and varying flow rates. The controller will randomly change between these modes and rates to generate a varying flow within the Pico Reef. More will be detailed as the project goes on
Other additions to the micro controller may include a form of telling you about an issue with the aquarium via sound or a light. This however is an additional goal and not one for the initial project
Aim for the 2.5L Pico Reef
The aim is to produce a small desktop reef aquarium which helps maintain multiple aspects by itself. The biggest issue I see are:
Water loss / Salinity Increase
Temperature Swings
Neglect from being forgotten
By making maintenance easy and it regulating things on a week by week basis mostly on its own, it will hopefully become an attractive option to allow such a small aquarium without all the common pitfalls.
The target is for soft corals and maybe 1 or 2 LPS based corals. Fish wise a small Trimma or clown goby may be placed in. I had a yellow goby prior to this and when he was unwell, I used the same size aquarium to help him along and he seemed happiest in there over my 60L nano reef. This is where this idea initially came from. I have the 60L and 35L aquariums however if they are not happy in this environment.
Other inhabitants being considered are Sexy Shrimp and Bumble Bee snails. Maybe a small scarlet crab, but very much open to ideas here and anything purchased has alternative homes ready for them.
As mentioned at the beginning, this is a long project for me. I won’t be rushing and things such as the controller will be run 1st without any live inhabitants to make sure it performs as expected.
There will be more to share as I go along, but this is the basis of the project. There is A LOT still to do, but in future posts I will discuss:
3D printed rock scape experience
3D Printed Pump design and function
Planned Water Change process
LED lighting Plan
DIY Heater design
And likely many more!
I hope by sharing I can get people both excited and question my choices. Any experiences people have had with small aquariums like this; please don’t hesitate to leave a comment. Will leave you with a short video of the pump in action, firing some particles about to help me see what kind of flow is being generated
Comment away!
Paul
I will be documenting the development, successes and failures of my 2.5L Pico Reef Concept aquarium here with you all. It will be a long process, but I personally enjoy the challenge.
The aquarium will be a 15 x 15 x 15cm cube ( 6x6x6” ) which is 3.3L or 0.85 gallons. The internal measurements however are closer to 14cm and I won’t have the water level all the way to the very top. Therefore:
14 x 14 x 13cm = 2.54L, so 2.5L
Multiple aspects of this build will be custom. These include:
3D Printed Pump
3D Printed Rock scape
3D Printed Stand
3D Printed Lid
3D Printed gravity fed auto top up with 3D printed float valve
DIY Aquarium Heater
Fan Cooling
DIY LED Light Fixture
Heating, Cooling, Lighting and flow are to all be controlled by a micro controller to make the process of running a Pico aquarium as simple as possible. These functions will be:
(1) Heating Aquarium to Temperature target
The controller will run a heating element until a desired temperature is reached. A Thermistor will be used and the circuit will be adjusted to try and achieve as stable temperature reading as possible, to flatten out variances in temperature.
(2) Cooling Aquarium to Temperature target
Same as above. Once an upper temperature threshold is reached, a fan will be powered on to cool the aquarium down
(3) Lighting going on and off based on internal background light levels
I don’t suspect many people would be great at remembering to turn on and off the lights on a Pico reef aquarium. With the aquarium planning to run more hardy coral options, the controller will detect the ambient light levels. Once natural light is detected, it will turn on the lights. When the rooms lights go off at night, it will naturally follow this. An override switch will be available if not desired.
(4) Pump Regulation
The 3D Printed pump will be capable of creating a small standing wave and varying flow rates. The controller will randomly change between these modes and rates to generate a varying flow within the Pico Reef. More will be detailed as the project goes on
Other additions to the micro controller may include a form of telling you about an issue with the aquarium via sound or a light. This however is an additional goal and not one for the initial project
Aim for the 2.5L Pico Reef
The aim is to produce a small desktop reef aquarium which helps maintain multiple aspects by itself. The biggest issue I see are:
Water loss / Salinity Increase
Temperature Swings
Neglect from being forgotten
By making maintenance easy and it regulating things on a week by week basis mostly on its own, it will hopefully become an attractive option to allow such a small aquarium without all the common pitfalls.
The target is for soft corals and maybe 1 or 2 LPS based corals. Fish wise a small Trimma or clown goby may be placed in. I had a yellow goby prior to this and when he was unwell, I used the same size aquarium to help him along and he seemed happiest in there over my 60L nano reef. This is where this idea initially came from. I have the 60L and 35L aquariums however if they are not happy in this environment.
Other inhabitants being considered are Sexy Shrimp and Bumble Bee snails. Maybe a small scarlet crab, but very much open to ideas here and anything purchased has alternative homes ready for them.
As mentioned at the beginning, this is a long project for me. I won’t be rushing and things such as the controller will be run 1st without any live inhabitants to make sure it performs as expected.
There will be more to share as I go along, but this is the basis of the project. There is A LOT still to do, but in future posts I will discuss:
3D printed rock scape experience
3D Printed Pump design and function
Planned Water Change process
LED lighting Plan
DIY Heater design
And likely many more!
I hope by sharing I can get people both excited and question my choices. Any experiences people have had with small aquariums like this; please don’t hesitate to leave a comment. Will leave you with a short video of the pump in action, firing some particles about to help me see what kind of flow is being generated
Comment away!
Paul