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The Silver Spring area — are you local?This is a great build. Where are you in MD?
I am in the Upper Marlboro area. Do you go to Tropical Lagoon? I haven't been there in years, the owner was always helpful and honest.The Silver Spring area — are you local?
I haven’t been there. Just moved from the VA side so mostly familiar with shops on that side of townI am in the Upper Marlboro area. Do you go to Tropical Lagoon? I haven't been there in years, the owner was always helpful and honest.
Just the added challenge of plumbing. Don’t want to run pipes through floors and that’s an exterior wall, so best to avoid running lines through it. A remote sump is something I’d love to do, but not on this build.If the tank is over the garage/storage room, any particular reason why not running the sump there below?
Thank you! I’d always love bigger, but space becomes such an issue….Definitely following! This is basically my dream tank, although I want the WB 7225, just don't have the space or budget yet lol
Yeah, I am discovering that problem! Hoping when the tank is lit and the lights around it are off that I can overcome that issueAwesome build so far! I look forward to seeing it progress.
I’ve got a similar peninsula build but it’s freshwater. It’s great in person but I always get annoyed it doesn’t show as well in pictures being able to see the other room behind it. 1st world problems ha.
Having everything else dark helps and it’s definitely worth it for the in person experience IMO. It’s just something I didn’t think about before setting it up.Yeah, I am discovering that problem! Hoping when the tank is lit and the lights around it are off that I can overcome that issue
Awesome build so far! I look forward to seeing it progress.
I’ve got a similar peninsula build but it’s freshwater. It’s great in person but I always get annoyed it doesn’t show as well in pictures being able to see the other room behind it. 1st world problems ha.
So what happened to the aquascaping update?In the next updates I'll share how I did the aquascape, the DIY light pendant that houses my Kessil A360X pucks, and hopefully some water will be going in soon. Thanks for following along.
Hello R2R -
At long last, it's happening. After 18 years in this hobby I'm jumping in to build the tank I've always wanted: a peninsula reef room divider.
Background: I first started keeping marine fish when I was a poor college student working at a small aquarium shop in Blacksburg, Virginia. I was a student at Virginia Tech and had a 10 gallon nano reef that I kept in my dorm room. Every Christmas and summer break, I'd load the tank into the back of my car and drive it 6 hours to Atlanta, which was home. My dad had kept marine tanks during my childhood, and I remember flipping through J. Sprung's texts for "light reading" on the topic of reef keeping. At the pet shop I started as the freshwater manager, but quickly evolved into overseeing the marine section. I remember telling customers things like "you need 10 watts of compact florescent bulb per gallon of water"... boy how far we've come. In the years since I have kept dozens of marine tanks and have experimented with the gambit of methods for reef keeping, ranging from elaborate algae reactors to full ZeoVit on a nano reef. I'd like to think I've learned some valuable lessons along the way -- though this hobby likes to humble us (see my thread from a year ago where I couldn't figure out what was going on with my salt mix.... sigh). Anyway, this build will be the culmination of my experiences thus far --- all in a tank format I've long lusted to employ --- the peninsula room divider.
The Tank: We spent the last year renovating a new house in Maryland, and I spent many hours of that renovation thinking about the future fish tank. To the point that I even had our electrical contractor install a separate GFCI circuit independent of our other outlets to power this tank! The ideal aquarium was going to slide in between the living room and dining area, right below a drop down in the ceiling that holds our HVAC ducts and directly above a steel structural beam. After extensive research, comparing Red Sea, Waterbox and Cade's offerings in the ~100 gallon peninsula lineup, I opted for the Waterbox 4820. My rationale for selecting this tank was based on the overall dimensions, the aluminum frame stand, and the price point. While Cade was arguably the better built tank, the dimensions were a touch large for the space. Waterbox customer service also was a major contributor -- I dealt with their agents several times for inventory information, tank specs, and a simple warranty claim, and they were prompt and professional each time.
Build Philosophy: Like anyone who has been in this hobby for more than 5 minutes, I've had my share of painful lessons. Failed return pumps. Cracked heaters. Disease outbreaks that wipe out the entire tank. Every pest known to mankind. Gear that leaks, floods, breaks, etc. While I cannot hope to avoid every possible failure in this build, I will be taking precautions to minimize the risk of problems. To that end, my philosophy is simple enough: Trust what works. I have had a long history of success with powerful protein skimming, and so heavy skimming will be a core feature of this build. Likewise, I have had success with algae refugiums as a means of nutrient control. Finally, my dosing and additives will be targeted and focused -- no more "mystery juice" (*cough* Vibrant). With one exception, everything I'm doing in this tank is something I've done before, that I feel comfortable employing for a successful tank, and that straight up makes biological sense. That one exception? This tank will be my first time dabbling with ozone.... eventually.
Equipment List:
Current FTS (1 December 2023):
- Waterbox 4820 Peninsula tank
- Abyzz A100 return pump
- Kessil A360X Tuna Blue light fixtures in custom DIY pendant
- Royal Exclusiv protein skimmer
- EcoTech MP-40QD pumps
- Neptune Apex
- Neptune Trident
- Neptune DOS and DDR
- Neptune GRO refugium light
- Ozotech ozone generator
- BRS bulk 2 part
Table of Contents:
Yeah it looks great in person, but haven’t gotten the knack of photographing it yet. But there isn’t much to photograph yet, so when that changes, I’ll be more motivated!Having everything else dark helps and it’s definitely worth it for the in person experience IMO. It’s just something I didn’t think about before setting it up.
Thank you! Appreciate everyone who has dropped in so far and is along for the rideStellar build, I’ll be following this until the end!
It’s still coming —- I was hoping to get better pics of the aquascape in the tank before I share it. Maybe tomorrow….Nice build, following along. I really like what you've done with this tank so far and really fits the room well.
So what happened to the aquascaping update?
I don’t know exactly, but there are 4 points of contact between the load bearing frame and the shelf supports, so probably more weight then I’ll ever put on it. I wouldn’t put my ATO reservoir up there for practical reasons, but I am sure it’d handle the weight. I’ve jostled and shook the shelves as I was building them and they are quite sturdy. Unless you were planning to attach something particularly heavy, I don’t think you’d have any issues.Thanks for posting! This work youre doing with the tslot was exactly what I had in mind so seeing how its working out for you is exciting. My vision is to setup smaller frag tanks above my sump. Do you have any idea what kind of weight your shelving can support?
I tested the water this evening and we look to have mostly completed the nitrogen cycle. Virtually undetectable amounts of nitrite and nitrate. So I plan to add some clowns this weekend and use them to help "finish" the cycle.
I also got some 3D printed deflectors to attach to the MP40s. I love the amount of water these pumps can move, but they are kicking up my deep sand bed in that corner. I am hoping the deflectors will allow me to push more water the length of the tank without moving the sand quite as violently (I am using the MP40s in gyre mode, with one serving as the master and running for 10 minutes, while the other does a reverse mirror of it, then they switch). I'd like to get a nice current through the tank! I have simultaneously been tinkering with the flow through the main pump and sump; I only need 5-10x turnover an hour (400-600 gallons) in order to hit the sweet spot of my skimmer, so it feels like water coming out the returns is little more than a trickle.
I mentioned automation in an earlier post and also made headway there, with a new float switch installed in the skimmer lid that will turn off the skimmer when the cup gets full. This was a kit I found online that was plug-and-play installation into the Neptune breakout box. It also has a quick disconnect so that I can remove the lid easily when I need to take it to the sink for deep cleaning.
Finally, for a quick laugh --- I was visiting my parents this last week and my dad had an old reefkeeping magazine from 1996. This was one of the advertisements in the magazine....
Yeah, I’m familiar with Albert—- I was incredibly amused by the advertisement and the history of it. There were some other good ads in the magazine, like this one:Albert Thiel was a reefing pioneer. He died in 2017