![]() |
Newbie Qs: Sump, lights, cover (action!)
Hi. I'm planning a new marine aquarium and have a couple of simple
questions that I just haven't come across answers to. The basic plan is for a 75 gallon system, 80 pounds live rock, live sand, protein skimmer, powerheads, power filter, heaters, lights... just the basics, but enough to develop a decent system. So here are a couple of remaining questions: Sump: What do you do with it? I know the idea is that the sump allows you to pull water down underneath the tank to have more water and do "stuff" (technical term), but what does it allow you to avoid in terms of equipment up above? It seems that heaters and powerheads will still have to hang in the tank, won't they? Can you do protein skimming in the sump? Does it substitute for the power filter? Or does it allow you to add additional filtration (which a beginner might not need)? Lights: I've read the various debates that wattage values don't tell you everything about light needs in a tank (it depends on type of coral, depth, etc.), but for a 75G tank, 3-5W/Gal suggests 225-375 watts. I was looking at power compact retrofit kits, and there seem to be two options: 4 65W bulbs (setups around $275), or 4 96W bulbs (setups around $400). The 4 65W give the minimum lighting, which I think would be fine for the initial fish-only setup. But then here are some related questions: - If I buy a setup with 4 65W, can I just substitute in some 96W later? Or is there different ballast and other components for the bigger bulbs? Are the 96W bulbs bigger? Can you mix bulbs, e.g. 65W and 96W? I'd rather spend $100 more now if I have to replace the whole thing with a $400 setup in a year (if PC is how I go). - Is it ever a problem to have too much light? - Why 48" and 46.5" bulbs? Just in case you have a tight-fitting hood and need the 1 1/2" of space? Acrylic/glass covers: Many of the finished light setups have acrylic covers to protect the lights from seawater. Retrofit kits don't. I assume that you still want some protection from water splashes even if the lights are mounted a few inches above the water. Where do you get covers, or do you? Thanks in advance! Scott |
Newbie Qs: Sump, lights, cover (action!)
your heater can be placed in sump as well as the skimmer. depending on the
type of system your going with (reef, FOWLR, or FO) will tell if you need a "power filter" or not. reef's depend on the live rock and sand bed for natural filtration, a skimmer helps reduce the need for water changes to keep water quality in check. a sump can also consist of a "wet/dry" (recommended in FO (fish only) setups) lights................the watts per gallon is a really bad thing to ever get your mindset on. wattage is best kept to "depth of tank, and type of light" with surface area playing a partial roll in this as well. on my 75 I have 800w of MH, it was a reef and done excellent with all corals/clams. its now a predator tank, and other then sucking up all that power and $$$ its still great. the 4x96 would be in my opinion the better choice for a 75 gallon tank. I have 4x65 pc over my 29 gallon reef and its not enough for higher light demanding corals and clams. my seabe anemone is nicely colored and growing but to be honest it would do much better with more lighting. 4x65 PC just isn't enough and surely wouldn't be enough over a 75 except for softies (shrooms, zoos and such). with hard corals I honestly don't think you can have to much light, they just have to be acclimated to it slowly. softies on the other hand can get burnt/blistered quite badly even with very slow acclimation. the different lengths of bulbs are mostly different mfg's not necessarily for fitting in tighter spots, but it is a good side effect of the shorter bulbs. as for your question on the cover glass, I personally don't use one on anything except HQI bulbs which require a UV protective shielding. any glass/acrylic will decrease the intensity of your lighting and is IMO not needed. hope to have helped kc |
Newbie Qs: Sump, lights, cover (action!)
Very helpful, thanks. I guess I'm still concerned that water might
splash up onto the lights, which I read (and it made sense) as being a Bad Thing. But I also see that every filter will diminish the intensity. If it's pretty common not to have anything between lights and water (and they will be probably 6" above the water once mounted), then I guess it's not an issue. Thanks again. I've figured a lot out by reading, but there are these small things that pop up here and there... "Dragon Slayer" wrote in : [snip] as for your question on the cover glass, I personally don't use one on anything except HQI bulbs which require a UV protective shielding. any glass/acrylic will decrease the intensity of your lighting and is IMO not needed. hope to have helped kc |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 11:57 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
FishKeepingBanter.com