Read more: http://reefbuilders.com/2010/03/29/reef-bowls-think-outside-the-glass-box-115-gallon-reef-bowls/#ixzz2YUXV242V
I knew the bowl was out there, the vessel itself, something pre-made for a different application. Not sure where to start, I began looking into and even purchasing a couple large light-globes for giant event-style parking lot lighting fixtures. One held 36 gallons, but was smoke-y; the other had an exaggerated ”seam” and was gray in color. One night in bed I woke up and it just hit me, Aarnio Eerro’s ”Bubble Chair”! A clear acrylic hanging ball chair designed by Italian artist/designer Aarnio Eerro that has appeared in hundreds of commercials and advertising photo-adds since it’s creation in 1968.
Read more: http://reefbuilders.com/2010/03/29/reef-bowls-think-outside-the-glass-box-115-gallon-reef-bowls/#ixzz2YUXXIi6V
Read more: http://reefbuilders.com/2010/03/29/reef-bowls-think-outside-the-glass-box-115-gallon-reef-bowls/#ixzz2YUXXIi6V
I contacted the manufacturing company and explained what I wanted. I placed a special ordered; the chair was fabricated without the steel ring, chain, or cushions. I had already purchased the base, a 24″ schedule 40 slip fitting, when the bowl showed up. It was incredibly scratched and “crazed”, (small spider-web like cracks throughout the surface). I contacted the manufacturer, who immediately apologized and sent a second chair within days. The replacement arrived in worse condition than the first. I was out of luck unless I learned how to buff and re-finish acrylic. Sixty+ hours later, I had two crystal clear bowls. They didn’t want the first one back, so I ordered another PVC coupling-stand and re-worked the design to include the second bowl.Both vessels were set in place, dry and unplumbed, for months until I was done installing the 21″ tubular skylight, (that illuminates the central bowl), the sump, skimmer, supplemental HQI pendant for second bowl and other life-support equipment. The second bowl is positioned in the corner of the same room, receives natural sunlight as the sun is rising through a set of sliding glass doors that face SE (from 7AM-10AM depending on the time of year), 4-5 hours of just ambient room light and then a second 8 hour photo-period with a single 150 10K HQI pendant from 3-10pm.
Now that everything was in place, it was time to add water and test the structural integrity of the bowls. I filled both one evening; the bowls looked great, felt stable, and solid. I went to bed. The next morning I awoke abruptly to the sound of our fire alarm and the smell of smoke. This was not just any smoke; it reminded me of burning leaves with a magnifying glass as a child. As I rounded the corner into the living room, I couldn’t believe what I was looking at:
Read more: http://reefbuilders.com/2010/03/29/reef-bowls-think-outside-the-glass-box-115-gallon-reef-bowls/#ixzz2YUXdKt00
I had inadvertently created a giant magnifying glass thats concentrated “hot-spot” had burned our wall, melted our vertical blinds, and was now torching my favorite corn plant. I just stood there for a couple seconds in disbelief. My wife appeared behind me with her hands on her hips saying, “Only you could have created a death ray in our living room, only you.” I had my camera right there, the pictures of the corn plant smoking, the wall, and the melted blinds are actually taken the moment we both stopped laughing. I snapped them before I closed the blinds that let the source light in from the SE. I knew there were going to be some ”unforseens” with this project, but never saw this coming. I spent the next morning with a guy who tints windows for a living. As he tried hanging different samples on the sliders, I took readings behind each one with my quantum meter. I went with a 50% tint and it still melts the blinds today. (I just replace them when they get too disfigured.)
The 2 bowls are a single system sharing a communal 65 gallon sump, skimmer, and chiller. They have been set up for over 4 years and both feature a solid coral skeleton reef bottom. They were initially intended to house corals, more of a “reef tank” application , however many sessile invertebrates bleached and perished during summer months. Once I switched to vagile/mobile Inverts, i.e. anemones that can move to avoid receiving an overabundance of light during the summer peak, they have been nothing but a beautiful successful living sculpture and a joy to live with.
My company, Atlantic Reef Aquaculture, is currently in contract to install our first residential bowl in a client’s Key West home this coming spring.
Happy reefing everyone, think outside the box
-Dave Lackland
www.atlanticreef.com
My company, Atlantic Reef Aquaculture, is currently in contract to install our first residential bowl in a client’s Key West home this coming spring.
Happy reefing everyone, think outside the box
-Dave Lackland
www.atlanticreef.com
Read more: http://reefbuilders.com/2010/03/29/reef-bowls-think-outside-the-glass-box-115-gallon-reef-bowls/#ixzz2YUXhadFR
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