As per original plans in near future I'm going to add a UV sterilizer to my 325 Arowana tank which was set up last December. Need your opinions on one approach I'm thinking about to do this.
-- As you can see in pic below on the right side I have a 2000 L/hr internal pump feeding the OH shower filter. This pump is not powerful enough to feed both a UV sterilizer and the OHF.
-- I have an un-opened Jebao DCT-8000 pump (probably a bit more powerful than I need but I can dial it down to about 5,000 L/hr from the get-go using the controller, then head pressure will help after that), sitting on the shelf and would like to use this.
-- But for aesthetic and other reasons (vibration/another thing for Aro to hit or bite), I'd prefer not to put this pretty good-sized pump inside the tank unless no other choice.
-- As a side note I don't want to run a sump at this time for several reasons.
So here's my question: can I put the DCT-8000 in say a decent sized tote or even plastic trash bin filled with water just behind the tank, then hard-plumb both intake and return lines? So essentially the tote or trash bin would simply act as a reservoir for the pump to keep it from overheating (and out of sight). With the return line I would use a T-splitter, one side going to OHF and the other to UV sterilizer (and from there back into the tank). Each side line off the T-splitter would have a ball valve to control and balance the flow rate as needed, esp. to get proper UV sterilization.
I can guess the main issue would be how much the pump raised the water temperature in the tote/bin. The DCT-8000 is max 67.6 watts but I would likely have that dialed down closer to about 40 watts, so we're not talking huge power/heat). Was thinking I could easily add a big air stone from my DC air pump, which has plenty of unused pressure, to help at least somewhat to reduce water temp in the tote/bin. I also don't mind topping it off with a jug or two of water every few days to help with evaporation.
Plz let me know if you think this would work OK, or if you see some potential issue(s) I'm missing and better to just put the DC pump inside the tank.
-- As you can see in pic below on the right side I have a 2000 L/hr internal pump feeding the OH shower filter. This pump is not powerful enough to feed both a UV sterilizer and the OHF.
-- I have an un-opened Jebao DCT-8000 pump (probably a bit more powerful than I need but I can dial it down to about 5,000 L/hr from the get-go using the controller, then head pressure will help after that), sitting on the shelf and would like to use this.
-- But for aesthetic and other reasons (vibration/another thing for Aro to hit or bite), I'd prefer not to put this pretty good-sized pump inside the tank unless no other choice.
-- As a side note I don't want to run a sump at this time for several reasons.
So here's my question: can I put the DCT-8000 in say a decent sized tote or even plastic trash bin filled with water just behind the tank, then hard-plumb both intake and return lines? So essentially the tote or trash bin would simply act as a reservoir for the pump to keep it from overheating (and out of sight). With the return line I would use a T-splitter, one side going to OHF and the other to UV sterilizer (and from there back into the tank). Each side line off the T-splitter would have a ball valve to control and balance the flow rate as needed, esp. to get proper UV sterilization.
I can guess the main issue would be how much the pump raised the water temperature in the tote/bin. The DCT-8000 is max 67.6 watts but I would likely have that dialed down closer to about 40 watts, so we're not talking huge power/heat). Was thinking I could easily add a big air stone from my DC air pump, which has plenty of unused pressure, to help at least somewhat to reduce water temp in the tote/bin. I also don't mind topping it off with a jug or two of water every few days to help with evaporation.
Plz let me know if you think this would work OK, or if you see some potential issue(s) I'm missing and better to just put the DC pump inside the tank.