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#1
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![]() Congratulations for a well done job!
Good luck |
#2
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![]() Hey Kien, how deep is your sand bed? Im debating between a DSB and SSB.
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#3
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![]() Last edited by Coleus; 04-30-2011 at 04:51 AM. |
#4
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![]() all i can say is wow what a very nice looking tank
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#5
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![]() I had the same debate! I was even going to go bare bottom. In the end I went with a shallow sand bed of 0 to a max of 1.5 inches in my lagoon. So ya, it starts at at 1.5 inches at one end of the tank and gradually tapers down to just a dusting if sand at the other end. The powerheads have cleared a couple of spots of sand but I don't mind. I suspect once I get a couple of gobies in there that there will be a few more clear spots. I just love how the halide light shimmers on the sand and how it reflects light back up. Makes the tank a lot brighter.
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#6
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![]() Great looking tank Kien. I spent the last hour at work reading your build journal.
![]() I was just browsing for ideas for a new tank in my basement if I ever decide to develop it. Got a lot of great ideas from your thread. Amazing! |
#8
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![]() What a great build! The full tank shots are amazing with how you've done the rockwork. Thanks for sharing with us.
__________________
Mark... ![]() 290g Peninsula Display, 425g total volume. Setup Jan 2013. |
#9
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![]() So I'm sitting here looking at my fancy schmancy new tank and decided that it would really suck if it exploded. Thus I decided to install a GFCI. I know I should have done this at the start, and I intended to but for some reason it fell off my radar. Okay, so there are a lot of options. Buy a GFCI outlet and replace the main one in the wall with the GFCI. Or do I buy one of those GFCI powerbars ?? Lucky for me my dad had a GFCI outlet kicking around that he wasn't using. I was going to replace the wall receptacle with it but then decide that it would be nice to maybe leave the wall the way it is, and run a line under my tank and maybe use a GFCI powerbar instead.. Well, then it hit me. Why not make my own!
I ran out and picked up some supplies. A cable and a 3 prong plug, outdoor electrical box and weather proof cover. ![]() ![]() It was quite easy actually, and everything came with instructions. First I stripped one end of my waterproof wire for the plug. ![]() Then openned up the plug and inserted the appropriate wires into their respective slots. ![]() ![]() ![]() So now we have a plug. ![]() I siliconed the base of the plug (where the wire inserts into it) for good measure. Next I ran the other end of my cable into the electrical box where my receptacle will go. ![]() Insert said receptacle and attach the wires as per the instructions from the receptacle. ![]() ![]() Screw in the receptacle. ![]() Now we put on the weatherproof box. ![]() Attach the cover to said weatherproof box. ![]() Voila! one GFCI power outlet. Not quite a powerbar but anything I plug into it, including a power bar or two will be GFCI'ed. Incidentally I have two powerbars that I will be plugging into it. I plugged it in to make sure it worked of course. Orange light means it has tripped. It comes this way. Press the reset button to reset/untrip it. ![]() Plugged my 'fuge light into it and we have power! ![]() The whole process was actually quite simple and didn't take very long at all, except for having to pause after each step to take those darn pictures. |