For 5 years I have successfully run a 150g Planet Aquariums display tank with a 25g frag tank. After searching for more than a year, my partner (Tabatha) and I found a new home with the perfect floorplan. We started construction in August of 2016. In May of 2017, we closed and started moving in, behind the dining room/study was a gameroom that would be perfect to have a fish room with the display showing through the wall into the study. If we were going to put a hole in the wall though, I wanted a bigger tank.
The tank and support equipment would live in the game room, with the new display being viewable from the dining room/study. The 150 would also go into the game room until the 315 was ready. We had to flip the layout of the house to accomodate the ramp in the sidewalk in the next picture. The builder did not have a copy of the floorplan flipped, so we just mirrored it.
This was the lot we purchased in August of 2016. It was a fun process to watch the construction take place.
The only downside to the layout was the wall we needed to bust a hole in was semi load bearing and there was a hot water heater installed just on the study side of the wall. We considered having the water heater replaced with a tankless one, but the installation was too much and it was brand new. The electrical in the now fish room was upgraded to GFCI and a second 15 amp GFCI service was installed in the room as well. The hot water heater is the large grey cylinder at the top of the picture to the right.
Whole House Generator
Auto Transfer Switch
In December of 2017, the first major upgrade we made was a whole house generator. We started just wanting backup power for the fish room and ac, the cost to do the whole house from that point was negligible. The cost of wiring in a new subpanel to support just a few circuits was about the same as wiring into the main panel on the side of the house. We settled on a 22kW Generac that runs off the natural gas service the house already uses. The generator has an auto transfer switch to go between shore and genie power. It takes about 30 seconds for the generator to start up when power is lost so there are UPSs on the critical gear in the house. The transfer back from genie to shore power is seamless. Now that power was in place it was time to order some tanks.
After recovering from the generator purchase, we started working with River City Aquatics in Austin to make sure every aspect of the tank design was considered before ordering. It took several months for us to decide on the footprint we wanted. I had always had a dream custom tank in mind but Planet Aquariums has also just released their Mega Matrix line and the pricing was very attractive. I had a Marineland 90g cube before the current 150g. My dream tank was two 90g cube marineland tanks side by side. The cube measures 30" x 30" x 30" and I just fell in love with that form factor. Two side by side would be amazing. As we started to lay things out in the fish room, it became clear that a peninsula style tank would work best. It would allow the tank to be viewable from both sides, with the plumbing pushed to the end, the tanks plumbing would be tucked into a corner of the room. We finally settled on a 72" x 36" x 30" with Planet' tideline overflow. There was still lots of discussion about glass thickness and bracing that took another several months to sort out, I can't thank Jake at RCA enough for his patience with me. The tanks were signed off on and ordered in October of 2019 and delivered in late November.
Delivery went as smoothly as possible. The display had to be flipped onto one side to fit through the door, that was taken off its hinges. The original plan was for the display tank and stand to be stored in the fish room during construction. The stand was 1/4" too wide to fit down the hallway to the fish room. We decided to store it in the study. Luckily I had built some dollies to move the display out of the study during construction.
One of the dollies I built. A pair of these went under the display so I could roll it out of the study while doing construction.
Flipping the tank onto its side so we could get it through the front door.
Coming through the "front door".
The display tank safely transferred to my dollies and stored out of the way.
The stand would not fit down the hallway to the fishroom, so it was stored in the study as well.
The frag tank and stand went into the fishroom easily.
10 days after the tanks were delivered, I cut the first hole in the wall. Power for the current 150 had to be extended in from another circuit in the house so the power to the room could be cut. Some more equipment was moved to the second GFCI circuit in the fish room, but I didn't want to put too much on it in case it had to be cut during construction.
The hole that would be cut for the display.
Hole cut!
Plastic went up in the fishroom. A small room of plastic was created to keep more dust out. A thicker plastic (to the left) was hung from the ceiling to protect the current 150.
All drywall gone with a view into the fishroom from the study.
Temporary studs in place so the wall could be taken out. A new header and jack studs would take its place.
One thing we could not decide on was access to the tank from the front. I had read several in wall build threads that mentioned regretting not having access to the tank from the front. I was on the fence and Tabatha decided she would like the tank and a small border only. In case it really became a pain to not have access to the tank from the front in the future, I decided to build the frame for a set of cabinet doors under the new header for the wall. The downside of this was I could not slant the tank side of the wall towards the study. I was worried without the tank side of the wall slanting, there would be a section towards the front of the tank that the lighting would be blocked by this section of wall on the backside. After a small experiment, the lighting impact was small and confined to a small area of the front of the tank, only along the top. We decided this was an acceptable trade off and built in the frame for potential cabinet doors in the future. Neither of us were interested in access to the filtration under the tank, access from the front would just be for cleaning and feeding from the top.
New header with frame for cabinet doors should we want them later.
View from the fish room. Once the bottom plate was removed, the stand for the display was rolled into the fish room and covered in plastic.
Once the stand was in the fish room, the last piece of drywall went in.
Backside of the new wall. The bottom piece of drywall will be supported by the front of the stand once it's in place.
Study side taped and floated.
Fish room side.
Texture and paint done. I have to say texturing a wall is an art by itself. I tried shooting it myself on several test boards and could never get the combination of mud, air pressure, and dry time just right. I knew I was in over my head and paid someone to texture both sides of the wall for me. It was money well spent.
The fish room side.
By early January 2020, construction on the wall was done and it was time to place the display stand. The front 4 leveling feet would sit on the slab of the house while two feet on the sides of the stand, and the 4 feet on the back of the stand would sit on porcelain tile. The tile was rated for 10,000 lbs per sq ft so I didn't have any concerns about it breaking. I was concerned about the bolts that make up the leveling feet slipping or staining the tile. Since the front feet had to set out about a 1/4' more than the back, I decided to add a nut that could be tightened back against the bottom of the stand to hold these feet secure. Unfortunately, you can't just run to HD for 3/4", 18-8, stainless steel nuts. Fastenal had just stopped selling to the public too, getting my hands on these at a reasonable price became a chore. The rest of the feet sit directly on the nut and bolt head. Under the bolt heads that rest on the tile, I added a 2" x 2" piece of plexiglass to prevent the bolt rusting and staining the tile. The bolts and nuts are both stainless steel but they will rust.
Display stand in place. You can see the front feet sitting on the slab of the house. The side and back feet sit on protective plastic discs to prevent the bolts from rusting against the porcelain tile.
We didn't want to lose this outlet on the study side. The outlet box would be painted grey to match the wall.
With the stand in place I realized I needed to do something about a sump. I had toyed with the idea of running a large sump and a separate large refugium. My idea was for the frag tank to drain into a refugium since the frag tank would have less flow going through it compared to the display tank. The refugium would drain into a second set of bulkheads built into the skimmer section of the sump. I could take some off the shelf sump and drill the new holes myself but I decided to approach some custom manufacturers to see about custom pricing. I was really impressed with John at Advanced Acrylics. In just a couple of hours we were able to bang out a design that incorporated a large refugium that could be plumbed the way I wanted.
The design that would be built. This was my dream setup and I couldn't believe how easy the design process was, at what I thought was a very reasonable price.
Once I had the stand in place, the electrical hooked back up, and the filtration ordered, things got very busy professionally. Not much would happen for another month or so. I ordered some rock from Tampa Bay Saltwater (Thanks Deb and Richard!) and got the first big order of equipment from BRS in mid February. I knew the build would take a few months to complete at best, with me only able to work on it the couple of days I was off work each week. I really wished I had a chunk of time to set aside to work on it. Lol.
The first set of gear from BRS!
On March 12, I got my wish. I am a broadcast engineer that mainly does college sports for a couple national networks. We were just a few games into the Big 12 Basketball tournament when sports stopped. The next few months would be a whirlwind of furlough, unemployment, PPE, furlough, unemployment, repeat... I got busy putting this thing together, it was clear I was not going back to work anytime soon. With the extra time I knew I would be able to make something nice rather than just having to throw it together.
The first thing I worked on was lighting. I used generic black box LEDs over my current 150, and that was I thought I was going to use over the new tanks. I got busy building the voltage follower circuits I would need to make the black box lights controllable from the Apex VDM ports. The plan was to use 12 lights over the display and another 9 over the frag tank. I wanted a solid panel of leds over these tanks. In order to split the control circuit 12 or 9 times, and get the full range of dimming, the current for the control has to come from a separate power source. The voltage (0-10v) would be fed to the input of these circuits, they would be powered by the drivers in the lights, and output the voltage and current back to the driver which dims and brightens the LEDs.
Boards built to be voltage followers to allow full control of black box LEDs.
About the time I started soldering these boards together, I discovered Reef Breeders lights. I was very impressed with their layout and the ability to control all 6 channels independently. I really liked the price, and was even more impressed when I couldn't find any of the lights for sale used. I searched several local clubs and eBay with no luck. While searching for mounting solutions I came across dputt88's video and absolutely fell in love with the lights. The problem was they were currently out of stock. Logan was excellent with updates about when more would be in. In the meantime, I ordered a lighting truss from 8020.net that I would attach the Reef Breeders to. The next thing I had to figure out was how to move these things.
The black box LEDs sit off the current tank about 10". I cannot tell you the number of times I have leaned in to look at something in the tank and banged my head on the lights. One of the things that was a must is the new lights must move out of the way when I needed to get into the tank. I'd initially considered a simple rope and pulley kind of system but didn't want to see the rope going up a wall and across the ceiling to the lights. There was no way I was putting hydraulics, or the oil required, anywhere near a saltwater fish tank. Electronic wenches seemed like a good option but the motors in the ones I was familiar with were louder than I wanted to use. I decided electric actuators was the way to go. I was already familiar with DC circuits and understood the concept immediately. Supply DC power to the motor and the actuator pushes a rod out, reverse the polarity of this power and the motor will pull the rod back in. I would use (4) 32" Reef Breeder Photon V2+s over the display and (3) 24" over the frag tank. I estimated with the aluminum t slot and the 4 lights, the display lights would weight about 75-80 lbs, with the frag tank being about half of that. I settled on (2) 400 lb, 24", 12v actuators from Progressive Automations.
LIGHTS!!
Lighting truss built out of aluminum T Slot for the display. I decided on a coated 1/8" (3/16" with coating) steel cable to hang it with.
After drilling holes into the ceiling where I wanted the steel cable to pass through, I placed 2x4s over those holes and attached them to the rafters on either side. I then went back downstairs and drilled a hole into the 2x4s. In those holes I glued nylon spacers so the steel cable could be passed in and out of the attic without tearing up the drywall of the ceiling.
The nylon spacers mounted in the ceiling from below.
Two of these were made, one for each cable that would pass through the ceiling. I ended up using eye bolts as guides for the cable to keep it on track.
I had to thread one of the support cables through some utilities. That is a gas line, emergency drain for a hot water heater, pan drain for a hot water heater, and the water supply to half the house. No problem.
Behind those utilities, there was another water line right where the two support lines attached to the actuator. There was no doubt the hardware would chew up the foam and eventually the pex itself. To prevent this I connected everything and then slid a 3" piece of pvc over the hardware and mounted it to a rafter so it wouldn't slide back.
Hardware inside the pipe.
Since the house features an open floor plan, there are two very large beams that run the length of the house. The actuator for the display tank is attached to one of these beams.
I used several 2x4s on top of saw horses that were setup on top of the stand to mount the truss to the two support wires coming out of the attic.
Testing the actuators.
Lights mounted!
Before I could get started on the frag tank lighting system, the sump and fuge came in. These were pieces of art. I was stunned. I couldn't believe how beautiful they were.
The sump, fuge, and a deep sand bed box all came in freight from California.
I quickly got everything unwrapped and checked for damage. This was definitely motivation to get this build done.
The sump and fuge would sit in the garage a week while I finished up the lighting and one other project. Two water storage tanks were delivered the day after the sump and fuge. These are 23" x 82" and hold 135 gallons of water each. I will use them to relace (3) 45 gallon brute trash cans that I have used for years. The thing I like about them the most was the 16" manway into the tank.
The Brute trash cans that were on their way out.
One of two water tanks that will be used to hold RO/DI water.
After cleaning them up a bit, I leaked tested them and then moved them into the fish room. I put down some thick plastic, some cinder blocks, and some painted plywood as a platform for the tanks. I only filled one of them as I needed the other to store water should I need to move them around.
I could finally turn my attention to finishing up the frag tank lighting.
There were a couple water lines and the main return duct for the house I had to deal with for the frag tank support lines.
The little bridge I built to keep the support wires from chewing into the return duct.
The actuator for the frag tank was mounted on one of the supports for the roof. The two support lines are fed through a third pulley.
In case either actuator were to fail, I added a set of two clamps before the eye bolt on the first pulley of each system. These clamps will not pass through the eye bolt and should prevent the trusses from falling into the tanks below. Should.
Since I was in the attic, and we weren't going to be able to move the water heater, I added an apex leak sensor to the leak pan. This way I can at least be alerted to a problem with it an hopefully avoid a disaster. The leak sensor and power for the actuators was run down the wall and into the fish room.
Attaching the frag tank truss to its support wires.
It took 6 of us to lift the display tank into position. It went in pretty smooth. There was only a 1/4" of clearance top to bottom for it to slide in.
It was a huge accomplishment to finally see the tank in the wall.
A time lapse video I shot to show off the independant control I had of each set of lights. They do not move quite this fast but they move! It was at this point I was getting really excited about the build. I had never imagined the two actuators would work as well as they did and the t slot really looked nice. The next task seemed daunting, it was time to plumb this sucker.
The tank and support equipment would live in the game room, with the new display being viewable from the dining room/study. The 150 would also go into the game room until the 315 was ready. We had to flip the layout of the house to accomodate the ramp in the sidewalk in the next picture. The builder did not have a copy of the floorplan flipped, so we just mirrored it.
This was the lot we purchased in August of 2016. It was a fun process to watch the construction take place.
The only downside to the layout was the wall we needed to bust a hole in was semi load bearing and there was a hot water heater installed just on the study side of the wall. We considered having the water heater replaced with a tankless one, but the installation was too much and it was brand new. The electrical in the now fish room was upgraded to GFCI and a second 15 amp GFCI service was installed in the room as well. The hot water heater is the large grey cylinder at the top of the picture to the right.
Whole House Generator
Auto Transfer Switch
In December of 2017, the first major upgrade we made was a whole house generator. We started just wanting backup power for the fish room and ac, the cost to do the whole house from that point was negligible. The cost of wiring in a new subpanel to support just a few circuits was about the same as wiring into the main panel on the side of the house. We settled on a 22kW Generac that runs off the natural gas service the house already uses. The generator has an auto transfer switch to go between shore and genie power. It takes about 30 seconds for the generator to start up when power is lost so there are UPSs on the critical gear in the house. The transfer back from genie to shore power is seamless. Now that power was in place it was time to order some tanks.
After recovering from the generator purchase, we started working with River City Aquatics in Austin to make sure every aspect of the tank design was considered before ordering. It took several months for us to decide on the footprint we wanted. I had always had a dream custom tank in mind but Planet Aquariums has also just released their Mega Matrix line and the pricing was very attractive. I had a Marineland 90g cube before the current 150g. My dream tank was two 90g cube marineland tanks side by side. The cube measures 30" x 30" x 30" and I just fell in love with that form factor. Two side by side would be amazing. As we started to lay things out in the fish room, it became clear that a peninsula style tank would work best. It would allow the tank to be viewable from both sides, with the plumbing pushed to the end, the tanks plumbing would be tucked into a corner of the room. We finally settled on a 72" x 36" x 30" with Planet' tideline overflow. There was still lots of discussion about glass thickness and bracing that took another several months to sort out, I can't thank Jake at RCA enough for his patience with me. The tanks were signed off on and ordered in October of 2019 and delivered in late November.
Delivery went as smoothly as possible. The display had to be flipped onto one side to fit through the door, that was taken off its hinges. The original plan was for the display tank and stand to be stored in the fish room during construction. The stand was 1/4" too wide to fit down the hallway to the fish room. We decided to store it in the study. Luckily I had built some dollies to move the display out of the study during construction.
One of the dollies I built. A pair of these went under the display so I could roll it out of the study while doing construction.
Flipping the tank onto its side so we could get it through the front door.
Coming through the "front door".
The display tank safely transferred to my dollies and stored out of the way.
The stand would not fit down the hallway to the fishroom, so it was stored in the study as well.
The frag tank and stand went into the fishroom easily.
10 days after the tanks were delivered, I cut the first hole in the wall. Power for the current 150 had to be extended in from another circuit in the house so the power to the room could be cut. Some more equipment was moved to the second GFCI circuit in the fish room, but I didn't want to put too much on it in case it had to be cut during construction.
The hole that would be cut for the display.
Hole cut!
Plastic went up in the fishroom. A small room of plastic was created to keep more dust out. A thicker plastic (to the left) was hung from the ceiling to protect the current 150.
All drywall gone with a view into the fishroom from the study.
Temporary studs in place so the wall could be taken out. A new header and jack studs would take its place.
One thing we could not decide on was access to the tank from the front. I had read several in wall build threads that mentioned regretting not having access to the tank from the front. I was on the fence and Tabatha decided she would like the tank and a small border only. In case it really became a pain to not have access to the tank from the front in the future, I decided to build the frame for a set of cabinet doors under the new header for the wall. The downside of this was I could not slant the tank side of the wall towards the study. I was worried without the tank side of the wall slanting, there would be a section towards the front of the tank that the lighting would be blocked by this section of wall on the backside. After a small experiment, the lighting impact was small and confined to a small area of the front of the tank, only along the top. We decided this was an acceptable trade off and built in the frame for potential cabinet doors in the future. Neither of us were interested in access to the filtration under the tank, access from the front would just be for cleaning and feeding from the top.
New header with frame for cabinet doors should we want them later.
View from the fish room. Once the bottom plate was removed, the stand for the display was rolled into the fish room and covered in plastic.
Once the stand was in the fish room, the last piece of drywall went in.
Backside of the new wall. The bottom piece of drywall will be supported by the front of the stand once it's in place.
Study side taped and floated.
Fish room side.
Texture and paint done. I have to say texturing a wall is an art by itself. I tried shooting it myself on several test boards and could never get the combination of mud, air pressure, and dry time just right. I knew I was in over my head and paid someone to texture both sides of the wall for me. It was money well spent.
The fish room side.
By early January 2020, construction on the wall was done and it was time to place the display stand. The front 4 leveling feet would sit on the slab of the house while two feet on the sides of the stand, and the 4 feet on the back of the stand would sit on porcelain tile. The tile was rated for 10,000 lbs per sq ft so I didn't have any concerns about it breaking. I was concerned about the bolts that make up the leveling feet slipping or staining the tile. Since the front feet had to set out about a 1/4' more than the back, I decided to add a nut that could be tightened back against the bottom of the stand to hold these feet secure. Unfortunately, you can't just run to HD for 3/4", 18-8, stainless steel nuts. Fastenal had just stopped selling to the public too, getting my hands on these at a reasonable price became a chore. The rest of the feet sit directly on the nut and bolt head. Under the bolt heads that rest on the tile, I added a 2" x 2" piece of plexiglass to prevent the bolt rusting and staining the tile. The bolts and nuts are both stainless steel but they will rust.
Display stand in place. You can see the front feet sitting on the slab of the house. The side and back feet sit on protective plastic discs to prevent the bolts from rusting against the porcelain tile.
We didn't want to lose this outlet on the study side. The outlet box would be painted grey to match the wall.
With the stand in place I realized I needed to do something about a sump. I had toyed with the idea of running a large sump and a separate large refugium. My idea was for the frag tank to drain into a refugium since the frag tank would have less flow going through it compared to the display tank. The refugium would drain into a second set of bulkheads built into the skimmer section of the sump. I could take some off the shelf sump and drill the new holes myself but I decided to approach some custom manufacturers to see about custom pricing. I was really impressed with John at Advanced Acrylics. In just a couple of hours we were able to bang out a design that incorporated a large refugium that could be plumbed the way I wanted.
The design that would be built. This was my dream setup and I couldn't believe how easy the design process was, at what I thought was a very reasonable price.
Once I had the stand in place, the electrical hooked back up, and the filtration ordered, things got very busy professionally. Not much would happen for another month or so. I ordered some rock from Tampa Bay Saltwater (Thanks Deb and Richard!) and got the first big order of equipment from BRS in mid February. I knew the build would take a few months to complete at best, with me only able to work on it the couple of days I was off work each week. I really wished I had a chunk of time to set aside to work on it. Lol.
The first set of gear from BRS!
On March 12, I got my wish. I am a broadcast engineer that mainly does college sports for a couple national networks. We were just a few games into the Big 12 Basketball tournament when sports stopped. The next few months would be a whirlwind of furlough, unemployment, PPE, furlough, unemployment, repeat... I got busy putting this thing together, it was clear I was not going back to work anytime soon. With the extra time I knew I would be able to make something nice rather than just having to throw it together.
The first thing I worked on was lighting. I used generic black box LEDs over my current 150, and that was I thought I was going to use over the new tanks. I got busy building the voltage follower circuits I would need to make the black box lights controllable from the Apex VDM ports. The plan was to use 12 lights over the display and another 9 over the frag tank. I wanted a solid panel of leds over these tanks. In order to split the control circuit 12 or 9 times, and get the full range of dimming, the current for the control has to come from a separate power source. The voltage (0-10v) would be fed to the input of these circuits, they would be powered by the drivers in the lights, and output the voltage and current back to the driver which dims and brightens the LEDs.
Boards built to be voltage followers to allow full control of black box LEDs.
About the time I started soldering these boards together, I discovered Reef Breeders lights. I was very impressed with their layout and the ability to control all 6 channels independently. I really liked the price, and was even more impressed when I couldn't find any of the lights for sale used. I searched several local clubs and eBay with no luck. While searching for mounting solutions I came across dputt88's video and absolutely fell in love with the lights. The problem was they were currently out of stock. Logan was excellent with updates about when more would be in. In the meantime, I ordered a lighting truss from 8020.net that I would attach the Reef Breeders to. The next thing I had to figure out was how to move these things.
The black box LEDs sit off the current tank about 10". I cannot tell you the number of times I have leaned in to look at something in the tank and banged my head on the lights. One of the things that was a must is the new lights must move out of the way when I needed to get into the tank. I'd initially considered a simple rope and pulley kind of system but didn't want to see the rope going up a wall and across the ceiling to the lights. There was no way I was putting hydraulics, or the oil required, anywhere near a saltwater fish tank. Electronic wenches seemed like a good option but the motors in the ones I was familiar with were louder than I wanted to use. I decided electric actuators was the way to go. I was already familiar with DC circuits and understood the concept immediately. Supply DC power to the motor and the actuator pushes a rod out, reverse the polarity of this power and the motor will pull the rod back in. I would use (4) 32" Reef Breeder Photon V2+s over the display and (3) 24" over the frag tank. I estimated with the aluminum t slot and the 4 lights, the display lights would weight about 75-80 lbs, with the frag tank being about half of that. I settled on (2) 400 lb, 24", 12v actuators from Progressive Automations.
LIGHTS!!
Lighting truss built out of aluminum T Slot for the display. I decided on a coated 1/8" (3/16" with coating) steel cable to hang it with.
After drilling holes into the ceiling where I wanted the steel cable to pass through, I placed 2x4s over those holes and attached them to the rafters on either side. I then went back downstairs and drilled a hole into the 2x4s. In those holes I glued nylon spacers so the steel cable could be passed in and out of the attic without tearing up the drywall of the ceiling.
The nylon spacers mounted in the ceiling from below.
Two of these were made, one for each cable that would pass through the ceiling. I ended up using eye bolts as guides for the cable to keep it on track.
I had to thread one of the support cables through some utilities. That is a gas line, emergency drain for a hot water heater, pan drain for a hot water heater, and the water supply to half the house. No problem.
Behind those utilities, there was another water line right where the two support lines attached to the actuator. There was no doubt the hardware would chew up the foam and eventually the pex itself. To prevent this I connected everything and then slid a 3" piece of pvc over the hardware and mounted it to a rafter so it wouldn't slide back.
Hardware inside the pipe.
Since the house features an open floor plan, there are two very large beams that run the length of the house. The actuator for the display tank is attached to one of these beams.
I used several 2x4s on top of saw horses that were setup on top of the stand to mount the truss to the two support wires coming out of the attic.
Testing the actuators.
Lights mounted!
Before I could get started on the frag tank lighting system, the sump and fuge came in. These were pieces of art. I was stunned. I couldn't believe how beautiful they were.
The sump, fuge, and a deep sand bed box all came in freight from California.
I quickly got everything unwrapped and checked for damage. This was definitely motivation to get this build done.
The sump and fuge would sit in the garage a week while I finished up the lighting and one other project. Two water storage tanks were delivered the day after the sump and fuge. These are 23" x 82" and hold 135 gallons of water each. I will use them to relace (3) 45 gallon brute trash cans that I have used for years. The thing I like about them the most was the 16" manway into the tank.
The Brute trash cans that were on their way out.
One of two water tanks that will be used to hold RO/DI water.
After cleaning them up a bit, I leaked tested them and then moved them into the fish room. I put down some thick plastic, some cinder blocks, and some painted plywood as a platform for the tanks. I only filled one of them as I needed the other to store water should I need to move them around.
I could finally turn my attention to finishing up the frag tank lighting.
There were a couple water lines and the main return duct for the house I had to deal with for the frag tank support lines.
The little bridge I built to keep the support wires from chewing into the return duct.
The actuator for the frag tank was mounted on one of the supports for the roof. The two support lines are fed through a third pulley.
In case either actuator were to fail, I added a set of two clamps before the eye bolt on the first pulley of each system. These clamps will not pass through the eye bolt and should prevent the trusses from falling into the tanks below. Should.
Since I was in the attic, and we weren't going to be able to move the water heater, I added an apex leak sensor to the leak pan. This way I can at least be alerted to a problem with it an hopefully avoid a disaster. The leak sensor and power for the actuators was run down the wall and into the fish room.
Attaching the frag tank truss to its support wires.
It took 6 of us to lift the display tank into position. It went in pretty smooth. There was only a 1/4" of clearance top to bottom for it to slide in.
It was a huge accomplishment to finally see the tank in the wall.
A time lapse video I shot to show off the independant control I had of each set of lights. They do not move quite this fast but they move! It was at this point I was getting really excited about the build. I had never imagined the two actuators would work as well as they did and the t slot really looked nice. The next task seemed daunting, it was time to plumb this sucker.
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