10,000 gal pool reef. 38,000 liters

Making some progress finally. Plumbing is almost all in and we should be pouring concrete this week :)

https://brightreefgardens.imgur.com/all/#1

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I have to admit.. the 4 x 4" drains look intimidating in real life.

The math is right to support the flow, but they look massive.

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Have the recent power issues in TX caused any issues? Has it caused you to make any alterations in case of more outages?

No. I like in Prosper and we're far enough north of Dallas that we didn't experience more than a few minutes of black out. I will be adding a whole house gas-generator though with an ATS (automatic transfer switch) so we can survive any future similar events.

We have natural gas, so that's the backup. It's possible to lose both but more unlikely.

The last backup to the backup would be a solar battery bank that drives a DC power bus for critical life support components.
 
quick update. We poured on Tuesday 22/2021! The concrete is in.

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It is ugly, but being fixed up now.

https://imgur.com/gallery/s9pLXaB

Next is plumbing for the pool, then all around foam insulation and filling in the dirt around it before the patio work begins.

After that - the epoxy shell.

Once the epoxy, plumbing and patio are done, the pool part will be complete.

Then the reef glass comes in play and the reef/pool sections become separate.
 
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amazing progress since first reading your posts about planning.
congrats...
look forward to next steps
 
Slow progress but still moving forward :)

I’m thinking through a problem and thought I’d throw it out to the collective thinking here to see if there’s a simple solution.

The main reef section is 8’ x 16’ x 4’ (before the additional glass height). With the raised glass I gain another 27”. So around 6000 gallons. The sump is 8’ x 8’ x 4’ but will probably max out at 3’ of water so 1500 gallons. The surge of s 8’ x 8’ x 2’ so 1000 gallons. And there’s a side algae scrubber, etc…

For the main reef, I need about 2’ of the 4’ pool depth and the rest is extra unneeded depth (serves no viewing purpose but costs in terms of salt and upkeep). So I need to displace it with something that is easy and cheap. I need 2000 gallons of “filler”.

My first thought was very large gravel. But my wife pointed out that if/when we move, we will have to revert the space to the lap pool it is now (for resale purposes). So removing 2000 gallons of gravel seems much.

I thought of waterproof sand bags but it’s the same issue of tons of heavy medium.

Can’t use PVC pipe because it’s too expensive and is hollow (I need to displace water volume).

I can seal the pipe but that would make it into a boat. I could add sand to make it neutrally buoyant but that’s a lot of work and more cost…

Cinder blocks have weight but are mostly hollow.

I thought of bags of ping pong balls in waterproof bags with sand to weight them down…

Clearly a rabbit hole of possible ideas. I think there’s a simple solution that is neutrally buoyant, cheap and easy to put in and take out… I’m just missing it.

Thought I’d tease the wildlife here … ideas?
 
thanks Vinny! Nice to hear from you. I'm looking forward to getting back to LI and sharing my progress... and/or learnings!

:)
 
When I first read the beginning of this thread, I thought someone was dreaming. It's now becoming a reality; flowing more power to you for your progress. It's going to look amazing when completed!
 
Slow progress but still moving forward :)

I'm thinking through a problem and thought I'd throw it out to the collective thinking here to see if there's a simple solution.

The main reef section is 8' x 16' x 4' (before the additional glass height). With the raised glass I gain another 27". So around 6000 gallons. The sump is 8' x 8' x 4' but will probably max out at 3' of water so 1500 gallons. The surge of s 8' x 8' x 2' so 1000 gallons. And there's a side algae scrubber, etc"¦

For the main reef, I need about 2' of the 4' pool depth and the rest is extra unneeded depth (serves no viewing purpose but costs in terms of salt and upkeep). So I need to displace it with something that is easy and cheap. I need 2000 gallons of "œfiller".

My first thought was very large gravel. But my wife pointed out that if/when we move, we will have to revert the space to the lap pool it is now (for resale purposes). So removing 2000 gallons of gravel seems much.

I thought of waterproof sand bags but it's the same issue of tons of heavy medium.

Can't use PVC pipe because it's too expensive and is hollow (I need to displace water volume).

I can seal the pipe but that would make it into a boat. I could add sand to make it neutrally buoyant but that's a lot of work and more cost"¦

Cinder blocks have weight but are mostly hollow.

I thought of bags of ping pong balls in waterproof bags with sand to weight them down"¦

Clearly a rabbit hole of possible ideas. I think there's a simple solution that is neutrally buoyant, cheap and easy to put in and take out"¦ I'm just missing it.

Thought I'd tease the wildlife here "¦ ideas?

Maybe the same waterproof bags filled with gravel? I know there are a lot of companies wanting to get rid of gravel for cheap. IIRC, 1 pound of dry rock displaces .068 gallons of water, so ~14.7 pounds for 1 gallon of water. If you want to displace 2,000 gallons, you would "only" need 29,380 pounds of dry rock.
 
When I first read the beginning of this thread, I thought someone was dreaming. It's now becoming a reality; flowing more power to you for your progress. It's going to look amazing when completed!

Thanks man! I need all the positive vibes I can get. :)
 
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