I am in the process of planning my next upgrade. Although I haven?t made any final decisions, I am probably going to do 180 gallon in wall set up with "tank room" behind it. As there are a lot of decisions to be made in setting this up, I thought I would start a thread where I could bounce ideas off of people and get some input. I am many months away from actually installing a tank, I would like to get the tank into place sometime around September/October, but there are decesions that need to be made relatively soon.
The first choice is the location of the "tank room". The tank will go in the basement. The ideal location for the tank would be in an area that is now occupied by a utility closet. The final space would be about 6 foot by 8 foot. What makes this an ideal location is that there is already a "room" that exists in this area, so in my wife?s mind I am not building anything "new" to house the tank. One of the walls is an outside wall, so it would be really easy to vent. Finally the room has a cold water hook up and a drain line so I could install my RO/DI unit in there, a sink and a floor drain to help contain any spills. The Downside of using this "room" is that I have the electrical breaker boxes for the first floor and the basement of my house in there as well.
I am concerned about the humidity and the "salt air", and any negative effect that this will have on the electrical boxes. As indicated above, there is an outside wall so it would be very easy to vent this room. I figure that the total system volume (as envisioned now) will be about 250 - 300 gallons between the display, sump, fuge and frag tanks.
I could move the "tank room" in order to avoid the electrical boxes, but the only other reasonable space lacks everything else. There are no outside walls so venting the room will be a challenge, there is no water hook up in the room, nor a drain for me to run the RO/DI nor add a sink. (granted all these things could be added, but they create other challenges) Finally, this would be an entirely new room as opposed to a new use for an old space. This is important when keeping my wife happy, I want to keep her happy, as she has consented to this project despite her mistrust of me and my projects and her dislike of my tanks. (I told her that larger tanks are easier to maintain, that there will be less perceptible noise, and that all of my equipment will have a home, i.e. it will not be laying all over the house)
Any thoughts on the humidity issue?
The first choice is the location of the "tank room". The tank will go in the basement. The ideal location for the tank would be in an area that is now occupied by a utility closet. The final space would be about 6 foot by 8 foot. What makes this an ideal location is that there is already a "room" that exists in this area, so in my wife?s mind I am not building anything "new" to house the tank. One of the walls is an outside wall, so it would be really easy to vent. Finally the room has a cold water hook up and a drain line so I could install my RO/DI unit in there, a sink and a floor drain to help contain any spills. The Downside of using this "room" is that I have the electrical breaker boxes for the first floor and the basement of my house in there as well.
I am concerned about the humidity and the "salt air", and any negative effect that this will have on the electrical boxes. As indicated above, there is an outside wall so it would be very easy to vent this room. I figure that the total system volume (as envisioned now) will be about 250 - 300 gallons between the display, sump, fuge and frag tanks.
I could move the "tank room" in order to avoid the electrical boxes, but the only other reasonable space lacks everything else. There are no outside walls so venting the room will be a challenge, there is no water hook up in the room, nor a drain for me to run the RO/DI nor add a sink. (granted all these things could be added, but they create other challenges) Finally, this would be an entirely new room as opposed to a new use for an old space. This is important when keeping my wife happy, I want to keep her happy, as she has consented to this project despite her mistrust of me and my projects and her dislike of my tanks. (I told her that larger tanks are easier to maintain, that there will be less perceptible noise, and that all of my equipment will have a home, i.e. it will not be laying all over the house)
Any thoughts on the humidity issue?



