- Joined
- Nov 2, 2019
- Messages
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You read a lot about companies failing to stand behind their products but I wanted to post about my recent experience with
a dreaded Tank Fail. My Reefer XXL 750 G2 has been running for 3 years (38 months to be exact). On my way home the other night
I received a notification that the Apex and Reef Matt were not connected. Figured a fuse went out and didn't worry too much. When I got
home I immediately saw lots of water on the floor and knew this was serious. The water in the tank was down about 30% (it's 160g in the main tank) and i quickly found that the front panel seam was coming apart on the top right, about 6 inches down. I have 2 tanks and have never had to deal with this but it's definitely something that I knew was possible. I quickly put a plan in place, got 2 frag tanks from a friend, pulled out all coral and fish. Put some coral in my 2nd tank (180g mixed reef tank that had some extra space) as well as some large live rock with Zoa's on it. It was late so I didn't contact Red Sea until the AM.
I did google Red Sea XXL Fail and a bunch of other similar terms and read a lot of horror stories about tanks failing as well as poor customer service. I went to the website, left a Support Inquiry with a couple of photos of the fail and hoped for the best. A few hours later, Red Sea responded and asked for a bunch of info about the tank, dealer, serial number, invoice etc - which I then provided. Within the first day, even though I was a few months past their 3 year warranty, they agreed to send me a replacement which will be here in CA about 8 days after I reported it. While this situation has been stressful, I'd have to say that Red Sea customer service was amazing.
The new tank is arriving this Wednesday (3 days from today) and I'm actually pretty stoked reboot the tank. It still cost me a lot of time and some $ (paying some local reef experts to help with new tank set up) but all in all the experience was a positive one once Red Sea fully stood by their products and agreed to send a replacement.
A couple of photos of the tank before and the failure. Stil have some rock in the tank with a power head on it waiting for the new tank to arrive. Will recycle some sand to seed the new live sand with old bacteria. The last photo is of my other tank, which is not fully stocked. I may just keep some corals from the failed tank in their - kind of like the new look.
Has anyone else reading this had a seam failure on their tank and if so, how did you deal with it?
a dreaded Tank Fail. My Reefer XXL 750 G2 has been running for 3 years (38 months to be exact). On my way home the other night
I received a notification that the Apex and Reef Matt were not connected. Figured a fuse went out and didn't worry too much. When I got
home I immediately saw lots of water on the floor and knew this was serious. The water in the tank was down about 30% (it's 160g in the main tank) and i quickly found that the front panel seam was coming apart on the top right, about 6 inches down. I have 2 tanks and have never had to deal with this but it's definitely something that I knew was possible. I quickly put a plan in place, got 2 frag tanks from a friend, pulled out all coral and fish. Put some coral in my 2nd tank (180g mixed reef tank that had some extra space) as well as some large live rock with Zoa's on it. It was late so I didn't contact Red Sea until the AM.
I did google Red Sea XXL Fail and a bunch of other similar terms and read a lot of horror stories about tanks failing as well as poor customer service. I went to the website, left a Support Inquiry with a couple of photos of the fail and hoped for the best. A few hours later, Red Sea responded and asked for a bunch of info about the tank, dealer, serial number, invoice etc - which I then provided. Within the first day, even though I was a few months past their 3 year warranty, they agreed to send me a replacement which will be here in CA about 8 days after I reported it. While this situation has been stressful, I'd have to say that Red Sea customer service was amazing.
The new tank is arriving this Wednesday (3 days from today) and I'm actually pretty stoked reboot the tank. It still cost me a lot of time and some $ (paying some local reef experts to help with new tank set up) but all in all the experience was a positive one once Red Sea fully stood by their products and agreed to send a replacement.
A couple of photos of the tank before and the failure. Stil have some rock in the tank with a power head on it waiting for the new tank to arrive. Will recycle some sand to seed the new live sand with old bacteria. The last photo is of my other tank, which is not fully stocked. I may just keep some corals from the failed tank in their - kind of like the new look.
Has anyone else reading this had a seam failure on their tank and if so, how did you deal with it?