I love the sound of water. It soothes and relaxes me. My home sounds like a spa with a babbling brook in it. All this makes me happy. What I find distracting is the electrical hum of, well, anything. Nature doesn't hum like my aquarium.
I'm about to upgrade my 125g to a 180g because I found a deal on CL I couldn't pass up. I'll be building a new stand from scratch which means there are no limits to my new configuration. Anything is possible when it comes to deadening pump noise. What has worked for you? What would you try if you were going to build a new stand?
I currently have a Pondmaster Mag 9.5 pumping to a height of about 7' for 610 gph

The front panel of the stand is removable. The next stand will have removeable panels as well. It currently contains an FX6. The white tubes are 4" PVC pipes with loads of bio media. The FX6 is configured purely as mechanical filtration. The 125g tank on the right is plumbed to this system as well and drains onto the primary tank.
Currently, the Mag 9.5 is in the right corner of the tank with the intake just below water surface. In case of terrible disaster, the pump would burn up after pumping only 20 +/- gallons onto the floor. The pump attaches to the PVC apparatus through about a foot of vinyl tubing in an effort to reduce vibration. I have chunks of sponge between the pump and the walls of the tank which help. A problem is the pump is technically hanging from this whole thing and tends to vibrate the whole upward tube. It's subtle but reverberates in a few odd places in the house and gets loud from time to time.

In a perfect world, I'd add a sump reservoir under the new tank so I could hide this pump from view while maintaining a constant water level in this tank. A minor gripe about my current setup is the water level bounces up to two inches. I add about 3 gallons of water per day to replace evaporation and plant consumption. I haven't done a water change for water quality in several years. The sump reservoir would allow both tanks to maintain water levels without fluctuation. A possible downside of a sump is the water head would move to about 10' from the pump reducing the gph to 450 which is still plenty since these tanks have additional filtration and a very light bio load.
Anyway, please send advice or photos of what has worked for you to reduce pump vibration.
Thanks.
I'm about to upgrade my 125g to a 180g because I found a deal on CL I couldn't pass up. I'll be building a new stand from scratch which means there are no limits to my new configuration. Anything is possible when it comes to deadening pump noise. What has worked for you? What would you try if you were going to build a new stand?
I currently have a Pondmaster Mag 9.5 pumping to a height of about 7' for 610 gph

The front panel of the stand is removable. The next stand will have removeable panels as well. It currently contains an FX6. The white tubes are 4" PVC pipes with loads of bio media. The FX6 is configured purely as mechanical filtration. The 125g tank on the right is plumbed to this system as well and drains onto the primary tank.
Currently, the Mag 9.5 is in the right corner of the tank with the intake just below water surface. In case of terrible disaster, the pump would burn up after pumping only 20 +/- gallons onto the floor. The pump attaches to the PVC apparatus through about a foot of vinyl tubing in an effort to reduce vibration. I have chunks of sponge between the pump and the walls of the tank which help. A problem is the pump is technically hanging from this whole thing and tends to vibrate the whole upward tube. It's subtle but reverberates in a few odd places in the house and gets loud from time to time.

In a perfect world, I'd add a sump reservoir under the new tank so I could hide this pump from view while maintaining a constant water level in this tank. A minor gripe about my current setup is the water level bounces up to two inches. I add about 3 gallons of water per day to replace evaporation and plant consumption. I haven't done a water change for water quality in several years. The sump reservoir would allow both tanks to maintain water levels without fluctuation. A possible downside of a sump is the water head would move to about 10' from the pump reducing the gph to 450 which is still plenty since these tanks have additional filtration and a very light bio load.
Anyway, please send advice or photos of what has worked for you to reduce pump vibration.
Thanks.