DIY Indoor pond with rubbermaid stock tank

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blacksnow

Gambusia
MFK Member
Apr 8, 2009
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Monoculus ;)
I'd like to setup an indoor pond to house a pair of stingrays in. I can get the 300 gallon rubbermaid stock tank locally for about $200 http://www.tractorsupply.com/livest...sories/stock-tanks/stock-tank-300-gal-2229935 I plan on putting it in the corner of the living room, and using some stone to hide that it's just a black stock tank. I think with some nice stone, and a few plants it can become an amazing indoor pond =]I'm just confused as to what would be the best method to filter this. I've debated an fx5 or 2 of them, but then I would have hoses for the intakes and outputs coming up over the edges. Which I suppose would possibly be hidden by the stone depending on how high I stack the stones.Wodnering if anyone could offer any suggestions/opinions for filtration on this thing. It says on the description of the website that the tank has a drain, but I'm not sure of what height it's located.
 
i believe the drain is in the side just about to the bottom. i've never personally had one, but always heard good things. i've even seen them in a shop that had ac110's hanging onto the sides.
 
i have 3 of these running in my garage right now :) i use rena canisters on two of them and i have a homemade 5gal bucket filter on the other honestly the 5 gal bucket filter works the best and was half the price of the canisters. i also change 50% of the water weekly though and they are always clean.
 
I say go DIY with 4" PVC pipe. I figured it out about a month ago, and all of the fittings and glue and junk cost about $20.
 
wednesday13;3820726; said:
i have 3 of these running in my garage right now :) i use rena canisters on two of them and i have a homemade 5gal bucket filter on the other honestly the 5 gal bucket filter works the best and was half the price of the canisters. i also change 50% of the water weekly though and they are always clean.
Are you using the drain built into the stock tank to overflow into your DIY filter?
 
I've thought about doing the same thing with the rubbermaid stock tank, except with a 100 gal, and prob just use a Magnum 350 for it.
 
I use fx5s and sponge filters in my stock tank. I would rather a sump or some drip system but i have never tried. My method is always just throw a pair of fx5s at it
 
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