The River Reef
Non-member
I recently added a 10 gallon sump to my 56 gallon DT. It is located in my living room and now I am battling a few issues that I could use some help with: Smell, noise, and micro-bubbles.
Smell - the setup is located in my living room and it now smells like my LFS in there. It is def coming from the newly added sump in the stand. It did not smell at all before I added the sump. I am also running a Fluval 405 cannister filter. Once I dial in my skimmer, I plan to use the cannister as a closed loop with carbon and bio-media. Right now it has filters, carbon and bio-media in the cannister. I need some suggestions to minimize the smell before my girlfriend flips her lid. It really does have a strong fish tank smell in there now.
Noise - Also since adding the sump the noise level is really loud. I would say that it is 60 percent noise from the pumps and 40 percent from the water movement. My overflow is a life reef with the silencer add-on. It still makes a little bit of noise but isn't too bad. I still would like other reduction tips... I was wondering if adding lids to the open outer box would help? The water entering the sump is below the water level but still makes allot of noise that resembles splashing from the heavy circulation. I read that some people put mouse pads under the pumps, this sounds risky too me. I did add a rubber tool box drawer liner under the entire glass aquarium sump. What are other "safe" quieting methods for the pump vibration and/or the water?
Micro-Bubbles - Due to minimum space when designing the sump, I didn't put the standard 3 baffles to help with bubbles. Now I am paying for it... my tank is full of bubbles even though it doesn't look like any are coming out of the sump return inlet. I put a flashlight on the sump and can see some very tiny bubbles getting to the return pump. I was thinking about gluing an extra piece of glass I have to work like a baffle. See the pictures below:


Smell - the setup is located in my living room and it now smells like my LFS in there. It is def coming from the newly added sump in the stand. It did not smell at all before I added the sump. I am also running a Fluval 405 cannister filter. Once I dial in my skimmer, I plan to use the cannister as a closed loop with carbon and bio-media. Right now it has filters, carbon and bio-media in the cannister. I need some suggestions to minimize the smell before my girlfriend flips her lid. It really does have a strong fish tank smell in there now.
Noise - Also since adding the sump the noise level is really loud. I would say that it is 60 percent noise from the pumps and 40 percent from the water movement. My overflow is a life reef with the silencer add-on. It still makes a little bit of noise but isn't too bad. I still would like other reduction tips... I was wondering if adding lids to the open outer box would help? The water entering the sump is below the water level but still makes allot of noise that resembles splashing from the heavy circulation. I read that some people put mouse pads under the pumps, this sounds risky too me. I did add a rubber tool box drawer liner under the entire glass aquarium sump. What are other "safe" quieting methods for the pump vibration and/or the water?
Micro-Bubbles - Due to minimum space when designing the sump, I didn't put the standard 3 baffles to help with bubbles. Now I am paying for it... my tank is full of bubbles even though it doesn't look like any are coming out of the sump return inlet. I put a flashlight on the sump and can see some very tiny bubbles getting to the return pump. I was thinking about gluing an extra piece of glass I have to work like a baffle. See the pictures below:


