“The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.”
Breaking the Cycle of Failure – New Sump, Better Results TBD
For me, it’s been the insanity of trying to maintain my 120-gallon reef tank with a basement 100G+ sump and refugium. Four years ago, a coral crash—sparked by the third external return pump failure (and without an on-hand spare)—forced me into a fish-only setup. Thankfully, all my fish survived. I replaced the pump and shifted to feeding the fish and cleaning algae.
Then, the latest pump failure at the start of 2025 pushed me to the brink. I seriously considered calling it quits after more than 30 years of reefing. For now, my fish are safely housed in a temporary home elsewhere.
This build thread will document my fourth attempt in my current home. It will force a go/no-go decision: Do I bring my fish back, maybe even reintroduce coral, or finally hang up my salt buckets for good? The revamped build will use my existing Oceanic Tech 120G display—with its three-sided Starfire glass—and feature Trigger Systems' Emerald 34 sump positioned under the display in the stand. It will include an internal return pump (no more external pump failures and leaking crises) with all electrical components and support equipment neatly contained under the sump—a space challenge extraordinaire.
I anticipate that I’ll need to devise an entirely new approach to maintenance. I’m also curious whether the new configuration will be quiet enough for the TV room. Can it be both practical, sustainable, and peaceful enough to keep me in the hobby?
Stay tuned for more details on the build—or look for the “getting out” post if I just give up.
The V3 build Oceanic 120 Tech Tank Closet Basement Sump Reboot
What once was and why it is probably insane to try again. Dave's-Reef V3, circa 2020, before the pump failure:
Breaking the Cycle of Failure – New Sump, Better Results TBD
For me, it’s been the insanity of trying to maintain my 120-gallon reef tank with a basement 100G+ sump and refugium. Four years ago, a coral crash—sparked by the third external return pump failure (and without an on-hand spare)—forced me into a fish-only setup. Thankfully, all my fish survived. I replaced the pump and shifted to feeding the fish and cleaning algae.
Then, the latest pump failure at the start of 2025 pushed me to the brink. I seriously considered calling it quits after more than 30 years of reefing. For now, my fish are safely housed in a temporary home elsewhere.
This build thread will document my fourth attempt in my current home. It will force a go/no-go decision: Do I bring my fish back, maybe even reintroduce coral, or finally hang up my salt buckets for good? The revamped build will use my existing Oceanic Tech 120G display—with its three-sided Starfire glass—and feature Trigger Systems' Emerald 34 sump positioned under the display in the stand. It will include an internal return pump (no more external pump failures and leaking crises) with all electrical components and support equipment neatly contained under the sump—a space challenge extraordinaire.
I anticipate that I’ll need to devise an entirely new approach to maintenance. I’m also curious whether the new configuration will be quiet enough for the TV room. Can it be both practical, sustainable, and peaceful enough to keep me in the hobby?
Stay tuned for more details on the build—or look for the “getting out” post if I just give up.
The V3 build Oceanic 120 Tech Tank Closet Basement Sump Reboot
What once was and why it is probably insane to try again. Dave's-Reef V3, circa 2020, before the pump failure:
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