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05/25/2013, 10:58 AM | #1 |
Registered Member.
Join Date: Apr 2013
Location: Owego, New York
Posts: 387
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Exterior Waterfall overflow?
Has anyone ever seen what i have been thinking about? I will try to explain without drawing up something
I was thinking something like 2x 20g long tanks, in an L shape, with one above the other. The top tank would have some sort of overflow box, or i was considering having it be an acrylic tank, and actually using one side of the tank AS the overflow. The water would "cascade" down into the lower tank, flow to the back of the lower tank and out another overflow, into a sump in the stand and be pumped back into the top tank. For now im thinking freshwater because of the salt mess from the water.. but im open to suggestions for how to keep the mess down, if such a thing is even possible or ever been done before |
05/25/2013, 11:06 AM | #2 |
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Join Date: May 2013
Location: Gilbert, AZ
Posts: 67
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I can imagine just salt everywhere. Even with freshwater you'll still see water spots on your walls and whatnot from the waterfall splashes.
If anything maybe a smaller tank into a wider tank would help minimize it or even have the water run down some rock or acrylic into the other tank. |
05/25/2013, 11:12 AM | #3 |
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Join Date: Sep 2010
Posts: 1,877
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I could imagine though drilling one side the the top tank, and enclosing the "water fall" portion between two sheets of acrylic, maybe a 1/4 inch apart. A normal bulkhead wouldn't work, but it would seem you could get something flat on both sides. I think the key would be being able to remove one side of the acrylic sheet "sandwich" so that you could wipe both pieces down. The acrylic would keep the water and salt creep somewhat in check, as long as you could adjust flow so it wasn't shooting out the sides, and being able to remove one sheet would allow for cleaning anything else out. (or even one of the tlf nano magnet cleaners)
You'd of course have to have the tanks sitting at least slightly off center to each other.
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I'm new to this saltwater thing, all comments should be taken with a BUCKET of salt! :-) -Stacey |
05/25/2013, 11:19 AM | #4 |
New Old School
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Luzerne County, PA
Posts: 3,293
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I saw a thread about something similar a few weeks ago. I believe it was a former PetCo tank that had the higher tank drilled and fitted with bulkheads to drain into the lower tank. It looked pretty neat.
My local PetCo has a planted freshwater setup with a higher center tank and two lower tanks on either side using bulkheads for drainage. |
05/25/2013, 11:25 AM | #5 |
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Join Date: Apr 2013
Location: Owego, New York
Posts: 387
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I was thinking the overflow teeth on top, or many smaller sized holes, and an angled piece of acrylic for the water to "stick" to when it runs down (could cover in rock), and another small ( shaped piece on the outside of where the water comes out of the top tank to prevent spray
Would take a lot of trial and error i think, and quite a low flow, cant just go drilling or cutting if the flow needs to be variable in testing... time to think |
05/25/2013, 01:48 PM | #6 |
Registered Member.
Join Date: Apr 2013
Location: Owego, New York
Posts: 387
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Or an easier solution would be to keep 3" or so of the top tank flush with the bottom tank, and have the water flow out of the bottom of the top tank directly onto the surface of the bottom tank.. Im going to have to make some drawing up
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