Freshwater temperature dilemma 6/22/15
Hello, again, and much appreciation for your timely and relevant responses.
I currently have a 60 gallon freshwater aquarium with all accepted testing
ranges. It is fully cycled with no ammonia or nitrites, ph around 7.0 and
nitrates about 20ppm. I run two hang on back filters and one submersible one. I
use Chemi pure and Purigen as well as regular water changes to control nitrates.
<All sounds good.>
The inhabitants are an electric blue jack Dempsey, two adolescent angelfish and
an African clawed frog. Everyone appears healthy and happy.
<For now; JDs aren't good community residents (for sure there are odd specimens
that are, but most males are highly territorial) and Xenopus frogs actually
prefer/need cooler water than the tropical fish you're keeping them with. Do
also bear in mind JDs are hard water fish, unlike your South American Angels.
You've got a lovely big tank there, and seem to
be doing all the right things with regard to water quality. Why create problems
by keeping a mishmash of incompatible species?>
However the tank temperature seems to run high. I have two
heaters set to 79 degrees F, to stabilize if the room temperature drops. I have
two digital thermometers set at opposite ends of the tank and both indicate the
temperature is almost 83 degrees F. I tend to obsess and the water doesn't feel
unusually warm but I want to be proactive. The light is just a standard
fluorescent, on a timer, with six hours of light. Ok question, is the
submersible heater possibly creating the few extra degrees of temperature?
<25 C/77 F is the starting point for most aquaria, so you'd be wise dialing the
heaters back a little. Insofar as water being warmer than the heater setting,
bear in mind the heater dial is very approximate hence better to rely on a
thermometer and a bit of common sense. Lighting can also raise the temperature
during the day. Don't worry too much about a few degrees' variation across a
24-hour cycle: this is quite normal in the wild, and fish don't mind at all.>
Might I lower the temperature by disabling this filter?
<In theory, the cooler the water, the slower filter bacteria operate. But cooler
water contains more oxygen, which helps filter bacteria work better.
Hence the sweet spot in tropical fishkeeping is between 22-25 C/72-77 F, and
unless you have a damn good reason to go outside this range (e.g., you're
keeping Discus) then this temperature range is the ideal balance between
metabolic rate and oxygen concentration.>
Alternatively could the fluorescent fixture raise the temperature by several
degrees?
<Yes.>
Finally I have to keep the tank covered because Frogger will jump out if able,
could the glass tops be contributing to the heat problem?
<Yes. Evaporation is a significant source of cooling for most tanks.>
Or should I just leave them alone?
<No. The Xenopus at least needs different quarters. The Angelfish will likely be
hammered by (male) JDs eventually.>
Again thanks in advance for your time and consideration.
<Welcome. Neale.>
Heating tank on unheated porch and fish stocking questions
5/10/14
I was wondering is it okay/safe to keep a second larger
tropical fish tank then the 55 I have now on an unheated porch in MN
year round with the right heater? We don't have room in the house for a
second tank ( Any heater brands/ types you recommend), its maybe 10
degrees warmer then outside/protected from the rain/etc. but that's it.
Keep in mind winters here can be 30- below at times. I was wondering if
its possible. Are there any risks with heating a tank/keeping it in such
a cold environment in winter.
<This will be virtually impossible to do in the Minnesota climate.
Aquarium heaters simply don't have the power to maintain the temperature
of a tropical aquarium in ice-cold surroundings. In fact aquarium
heaters are
generally designed to do no more than heat the water above ambient room
temperature, which isn't going to be less than, say, 18 degrees C/64 F
in most cases. You could of course add enough heaters to overcome such
limits, like using ten 150-watt heaters in a 55-gallon tank or whatever,
but the electricity bill would be insane, even if you worked really hard
to insulate the aquarium to minimise heat loss. I have seen people keep
tropical fish outdoors in summertime in the American Midwest, often with
excellent results. But invariably such aquarists bring their livestock
indoors.>
I was drawn to Jaguar catfish on planet catfish and would like to set up
a tank for a group of them plus another fish type i would see more of
during the day, possibly sliver dollars/ red hooks the like.,
<A good combination.>
what size tank do you recommend for a group of jaguar catfish. I saw a
150 gallon, do not know the dimensions but it was taller so shorter than
then my 6 foot tank 125,
<For the size, number of fish you are talking about, yes, 150 US gallons
sounds an excellent starting point.>
Thanks, Alex
<Do get in touch with your local aquarium club; Minnesota has an
excellent club based in the Minneapolis-St Paul area
(http://aquarium.mn) with really friendly members. It may well be that
you'd find it easier to experience all the fish you want if you can
share with others. So even if you can only own 1 tank, you can visit
other peoples' aquaria, house your fish in their tanks, participate in
group projects, and carry out all sorts of other things to develop your
hobby without needing any extra tanks yourself.
Cheers, Neale.>
Filters, heaters/ and some things you should know.
7/1/13
First off Thank you for your help. I really enjoy your site and learning
about fish. However some of your pages/articles on catfish and cichlids
on the wet web media site (under freshwater livestock) are all crumbled
together and its hard to look through them- do revisit and correct/fix
it if possible. Its probably not so bad in the cichlids but in the
catfish its awful.
<I will pass this on to Bob; FWIW though, if you learn to separate the
articles from the FAQs, the site makes a lot more sense. Articles tend
to be pretty much what you'd see in magazines -- indeed, many of them
were -- while FAQs tend to be aggregations of short responses to
specific questions. So the FAQs don't have a beginning, middle and end
because they're add to all the time. Using the search engine of your
choice can help a lot here, because you're quite likely to find comments
or replies relevant to your situation.>
<<Where specifically do you find "all run together"? URLs please. RMF>>
Filtration /heating questions for 55 and 90 gallon. If I use sponge
filters only will I be okay I rather like the sponges. Easy to clean,
and don't hurt baby fish should i ever have fry in my community of the
future.
<A fine approach; indeed, standard practise among cichlid breeders. You
do need big-ass sponges, but so long as you get the big sponge filters,
this can/does work extremely well.>
Should I go power filters too or just sponge, canisters are hard for me
to fix and maintain. (I have vision impairment and my staff know next to
nothing about filter maintenance ).
<Sponges can work just fine on their own.>
Thanks.
Also Would 2 heaters be okay in a 55 or 90 gallon . What strength should
they be/ brand you recommend .
<Will depend on the brand, but something like a 200 W heater is typical
for a 55-gallon tank, and you'd probably need two for a 90-gallon one.
Look on the back of the packaging -- there's usually a chart that lists
heater size, aquarium size, and the temperature of the room where the
aquarium is located. Cheers, Neale.>
Accurate Thermometers 1/31/13
Hello:
<Hi Judy, Rick this time. I have a physics background so I thought I'd
field this for Bob.>
The fish are eating again and are acting normal. The temp was down lower
than normal, in the mid seventies. I put two 100 watt heaters in instead
of the 150 watt alone, now the temp is 81. I notice that the cheap
floating thermometer with the suction cup always reads lower than the
digital one with the wire hanging in the water. I noticed that they sell
floating digital thermometers. I wonder which has the best accuracy?
Thank you
<Regarding thermometers, you have two factors in play here, precision
and accuracy. Precision has to do with repeatability. For any given
temperature, the thermometer should produce the same (not necessarily
correct) result. Accuracy has to do with the distribution of
repeated measurements averaging to the correct answer (but possibly with
a wide variation).
Most of the thermometers for aquarium use are dirt cheap and mention
nothing about how reliable the measurements are. So, regardless of
what kind of instrument used, there is always some question about how
reliable the reading is.
Consider that I have used a thermometer where I could physically move
the alcohol tube up and down the scale by as much as five degrees, and
that doesn't lend much comfort to the accuracy of that particular
thermometer.
In this case, it was an outdoor patio type thermometer, but it does
demonstrate how careful we must be in never questioning the results from
any given instrument.
That said, Take a look at the package or manual for the digital
thermometer and see if it lists a specification. Digital
thermometers should be both more precise and accurate (see above) in
general, and if the specifications are good enough to give you a comfort
level, you can use it to calibrate the other thermometers--in other
words, determine how far off the mark the alcohol thermometers are from
the digital results. Once you know that, you can add or subtract the few
degrees to what you read to get the correct value. And, you can use
several of the cheap thermometers and use them with a lot more
confidence.
Complicating all of this is the fact that your tank will have slightly
different temperatures in different regions. In general, near the
heater(s) will obviously be warmest, and farthest from the heater will
be coolest.
It's best to find the coolest spot and monitor that location as well as
somewhere close to the heater so you understand exactly what is
happening inside the tank thermally.
I know that's a long answer to a fairly brief question, but there is a
lot in the question. Hope that helps. - Rick>
Heater warning -- 10/07/11
I don't know if you guys want to post this or not, I leave it to
you to decide. But, three Strikes and they are OUT.
I have purchased three consecutive Top Fin 100 Watt
heaters. Each went into a 10-gallon tank.
Tank 1) Back in May or June I put one of these heaters into a tank that
held about 200 Ender's Livebearers fry and two adult females (with
the intention of moving the fry out when I could sex them). Clamped
fins, listless behavior, and many dead on the substrate in the morning
almost all died eventually. This was the tank I assumed had Home Depot
silicone repair, but now evidence points directly to the heater.
Tank 2) Yesterday, I used a second of this same model heater in a tank
holding my Pachypanchax playfairi killifish. Very active and healthy
fish.
This morning, both dead. Clamped fins.
Tank 3) Yesterday, I used a third of this same heater in a tank holding
my Australian Desert Gobies Just an hour ago, I checked these fish.
Clamped fins. Listless, juveniles dead on the substrate. (90% water
change done)
The first tank was a new setup. The second and third had been set up
for months with healthy and extremely active fish until I installed the
heaters yesterday. Today, dead.
There seems to be no way to contact the manufacturer as Top Fin has no
website. I believe they are a PetSmart subsidiary.
Needless to say, I am absolutely livid now that I have connected the
dots. These heaters have killed my three most valuable species, wiping
out two colonies and a young breeding pair.
Rick
<Thanks Rick for sharing this with us. Can't say if this is bad
luck or bad design in your experience, but I will make a few
observations. The first is that a cracked heater shouldn't
leak out anything poisonous. I've had to deal with cracked
heaters a few times, and while the rust inside them is scary, and
exposing your tank to live mains voltage is dangerous, there
doesn't seem to be anything actually poisonous inside them (in my
experience at least). Do check for moisture inside the glass tube of a
heater: this is a good sign the tube is leaky or cracked. Secondly,
because heaters sometimes jam in the "on" position, it's
a good idea to use two small heaters per tank rather than one big
heater. This is most practical in medium to large aquaria. In small
aquaria, the best you can do is avoid using an unusually large heater,
so if it does jam "on", it will not be able to boil the fish
quickly. For a 10 gallon tank, a 50 W heater is about right. In theory
a big heater shouldn't cause any problems if it's working
properly, but I do wonder if in a small tank, there's a risk of
overheating close by the heater. In any case, when it comes to heaters,
it's a good idea to invest in a decent brand. Cheap heaters
don't seem to last as long as good quality ones, and failed heater
can cause all sorts of serious problems. Good luck, Neale.>
Re: Heater warning -- 10/07/11
Hi Neale,
Just some clarification. In all three instance these were brand new
heaters directly out of the package. No cracked glass, no moisture
inside.
Operating properly.
<I see.>
There is a plastic or hard rubber piece around the top and bottom of
the heater, I suppose this is to keep the glass from coming into
contact with the substrate because they are fully submersible.
<My assumption too.>
My sense is that something toxic is on or in that material because the
fish show symptoms of poisoning. Also, a store manager told me about a
quiet recall where this model was removed from tank kits and replaced
with heaters marked "inspected," so this heater does appear
to have a history of problems. Wish I had known that in advance.
<Indeed.>
I will be contacting their corporate headquarters on Monday and let you
know if I learn anything.
<Please do.>
Rick
<For what it's worth, I've started using the Hydor ETH
heaters. These plug into the outflow pipe from your external canister
filter. Because they're completely sealed in plastic and not in
contact with the water, they should be a lot safer. It's also great
being able to stick the heater outside the tank. Eheim have some
canister filters with built-in heaters, and I dare say they're just
as good as everything else Eheim make. I know they're expensive in
the US, but Eheim products are generally well worth the extra cost if
valued over their entire operating lifespan. Cheers, Neale.>
Top Fin Heater follow-up 11/4/11
Neale,
This is a follow-up to the Top Fin 100-Watt submersible heater incident
I wrote about a few weeks ago. There was a 3 week delay due to some
emails being captured by my spam filter. Once that was straightened
out, PetSmart responded very quickly.
PetSmart has agreed as a gesture of good will (their words) to
compensate me for the replacement of my livestock in the amount I
requested. They have not admitted anything was wrong with the heaters,
but I know they did not inspected the actual heaters I returned, at
least not yet. I believe they plan to follow up internally, so if I
learn anything else I will pass it along.
Without complete closure on this incident, I think it would be wise to
thoroughly wash this model heater with water and probably also clean
with isopropyl alcohol before using with livestock.
Rick
<All very interesting, Rick. Glad you were able to sort things out
so amicably. Good luck, Neale.>
Heater issue, final update 11/22/11
Hi Neale,
<Rick,>
The reimbursement check from PetSmart arrived. I deposited it and
bought a big shipment from a breeder in Florida. Since I managed to
recover the desert gobies and replace the Pachypanchax for trade, I did
a little shopping. In addition to replacing my black bar Endler's, and
my peacock Endler's, I also bought 5 f0 Flagfish, 6 f0 H. formosa, and 6
f1 Sailfin mollies. Very excited with the new livestock, all doing
well, though the mollies are still very shy. All tanks are humming
along now and it's just a matter of time until my colonies
recover.
<Real good.>
The store did not save the two heaters I returned; apparently the
manager has never worked in manufacturing. They did buy back for store
credit the older heater that killed off the Endler's. This was the
incident I originally thought was the silicone of the tank itself.
Based on my experience, I suspect the toxin to be too soluble for much
of it to be left on that heater, but maybe they'll find something.
Overall, PetSmart was very accommodating and did not fight the
reimbursement after I spelled out in detail what was lost and made it
clear that these were not animals I could replace at their closest
location.
Rick
<I agree, it sounds like PetSmart handled things quite well. Shame
about the loss of your fish though. Cheers, Neale.>
Cold Tank... heaters, FW
10/6.5/11
Hello,
First off a huge thank you in advance for your help. You guys are
godsends to aquarists! I heart WWM!!! Apologies for not taking the time
to memorize my wet friends Latin names, I only know their common names.
I have kept a freshwater tanks for 6 years and recently moved from the
San Francisco Bay Area to Portland, OR. My fish came with me, this was
their second successful move :) . I normally have kept a 135 g tank
inside but had to part with the large tank due to moving. I now have a
75 gallon with a 12" Ruby Oscar, a 7" Jack Dempsey, a
12" common Pleco, a 8" orange spotted Pleco, and a 5"
albino Pleco. I have two filters on it, a generic TopFin style "60
gallon" filter and an Aquaclear 110 gallon filter. We have been
here for 4 months now and everybody seems to be doing fine, the water
quality is great, etc. I also have a 40 gallon with a 4" royal
Pleco, a 4" vampire Pleco, a 5 " albino Longfin Bushynose
Pleco, and a 3" "snowball" Pleco. I am aware that my
Plecos all will get quite large (sans the snowball) and a different
array of tanks will be needed. I also have a blue crayfish in his own
20 gallon. My new home can not have fish tanks in the house but I have
converted our two car garage into my "man cave." The garage
is finished nicely with drywall and the garage door is sealed well.
I put some spare carpet in there and it's like an extra room in the
house.
During the summer my temperatures started to get to 82, but rarely any
higher than that. I'm now concerned about the cold winters here.
Currently nights are reaching lows of 45 degrees F. My tanks are
dropping to about 75 with just one heater per tank. I'm trying to
think of the best way to get my fish through the winter here as
I've heard it can get down into the twenties. I've done some
research but haven't found any definitive or helpful answers.
Additional heaters and or/covers is what I'm thinking. Any advice
would be helpful. Thank you again!
Craig
<Hello Craig. I agree, the obvious solution is to use two heaters.
Ideally, two that are rated for slightly more than half the size of
your tank, e.g., two heaters each rated for 50 gallon tanks. This way,
they'd provide ample heating for the tank, but wouldn't get hot
too quickly, and if one got stuck "on", it wouldn't be
strong enough to boil your fish. Do note that heaters rated for a tank
of a given size usually assume the room is only around 5-10 degrees C
cooler than the aquarium needs to be; the colder the room, the higher
the wattage of the heater. If your room is really cold, then you'll
very likely need a pair of heaters that together would be adequate for
150, even 200 gallons. Using oversized heaters doesn't cause any
problems as such, the only risk is that if they fail in the
"on" position, they can easily boil your fish because they
heat the water very quickly. In any event, with all this said,
there's nothing to stop you bundling up your aquarium during the
winter. Polystyrene for example is an excellent insulator and can be
attached to the sides of the tank except for the front. Perhaps the
tank can be installed in an snug recess within some type of cabinet or
other paneling that minimises air flow past the tank and helps to keep
the bottom of the tank away from the draughts. You can even use an old
blanket to partially cover the tank, but do leave enough space for air
to get in and out, and lights will need ventilation or they'll
overheat. Cheers, Neale.>
Temperature... also heating/heaters
10/6.5/11
Neale,
I have heard that two species I am keeping are tolerant of low
temperatures, Australian Desert Goby (Chlamydogobius eremius) and the
killifish Pachypanchax playfairii. I don't heat the house in the
winter so
without a heater the water temperature in their tanks could drop quite
low if we get a couple of nights in a row below freezing. I wanted to
get a second opinion on both species--should I bother installing a
heater for either or both?
Rick
<Hi Rick. While the Desert Goby can withstand almost chilly
conditions, that's a short-term thing in the Australian desert.
Weeks or months of cold isn't what you want here. Likewise with the
Pachypanchax (a great fish by the way!). I'd grab a heater, and set
it to a low setting, perhaps 20-22 C/68-72 F. It'd be off most of
the time, but if things get too cold, you'll be safe. In summer, it
won't come on at all.
Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Temperature 10/6.5/11
Thanks, that reinforces what I had been thinking.
<Glad to help. Cheers, Neale.>
Re...? Fernando... Neale... 9/30/11
Thank you for your time. That was just what I need to know, very
helpful. I have some questions about the temperature of the water and
about feeding. I live in Puerto Rico and is very hot this days. I just
cant do anything about it. Do I need a chiller?
<Depends a lot on the species you're keeping. Most South
American and Southeast Asian fish can adapt to unusually warm days,
provided the nights are cooler, and equally importantly, that part of
the year is a bit cooler as well. For most tropical fish, 25 C/77 F is
ideal, with a few species, such as Discus and some of the Gouramis,
doing better kept warmer, 28-30 C/82-86 F.>
How the temperature of the water can affect my fish? Is it better cold
than hot?
<Depends on the species. Corydoras are certainly better kept a bit
cooler, 22-25 C/72-77 F being the preferred range for most
species.>
I have a question about my Hillstream loach. I am
feeding all my fishes with tropical granules because I think that
flakes make the tank a little dirty. They seem to like it. But I
haven't seem the Hillstream loach eating the granules. I think he
is only feeding from natural algae of the tank and ornamental
rocks.
<Yes, very likely. Algae wafers, such as those from Hikari, are an
excellent alternative.>
Some one told me that I should put some algae wafers in the tank once
in a while to maintain him healthy but he is already healthy.
<Yes.>
Should I feed him with algae wafers or just let him be? I was thinking
to buy a spotted Hillstream loach cause they seem pretty much the same
fish but may be it will help with the natural algae growing inside the
tank.
what can I do about that? Illumination in the tank is a led marine land
lamp and some other from natural light but not directly from the
sun.
<Hillstream Loaches are sensitive to low oxygen levels, and above 25
C/77 F, you are likely to have problems keeping them healthy. Floating
blocks of ice can help, as can increasing evaporation through air
bubbles and even by putting a fan nearby. Under stock the tank and
provide plenty of surface area and good circulation. The idea is that
even if the water is warm, at least it has lots of oxygen in it,
especially at the bottom, where the Loaches live. If all else fails, a
chiller may be a wise investment.
Cheers, Neale.>
High tank temperatures 9/2/11
Hi crew, this is Jenny. I've sent a couple of emails before and
they helped my fish a lot. :)
<Ah good>
Well, even though the summer's ending, it's still very hot. And
now that it's not hot enough for our air conditioning to run, my
fish tank is heating up. It's supposed to be at around 74 degrees.
I have a 2" angelfish (top to bottom) a 1 1/2" platy,
and a 1 1/2" fantail in a 10 gal.
<Mmm, well... it would be better temperament, water quality and
feeding wise if the last two were in a different system than the
Angel... and the Goldfish and Angel will need more room than a 10
gal.>
I know what you're going to say, it's overstocked. But I've
been making sure that the gravel stays clean, the ammonia levels are
low,
<Has to be zero>
and nitrates and nitrites stay at/close to zero.
<... Oh, maybe you mean Nitrates are low... NH3 and NO2 zero>
It's been a lot harder though since the platy now has two broods of
babies in a nursery net with them, but I'm selling them all as soon
as they get big enough.
<... ok>
Well, now my tank is 80 degrees and I can't do much about it: I
tried taking the lid off, putting bags of ice floating in the top,
shutting the shades, and using a fan to blow over the top of the water.
It's only gone down one or two degrees.
<Leave the lights off during most of the day as well...>
I don't have any money, so I can't buy a cooling system, my
electric bill says no to the air conditioning, and I've run out of
ideas.
Do you know of anything that would help cool it down, and won't cut
into my wallet?
<80 F. is not too high for these species... and more risk/trouble in
having the temp. vacillate. I'd leave your system be other than
what you're currently doing>
Thanks, Jenny.
<Welcome. Bob Fenner>
Temperature question
4/12/11
Hello,
<Hello,>
I have a question about temperature control of my platy tank
during the summer months. When I originally purchased my
platies a few months ago I kept them at 80 degrees. I was told this was
too warm for platies and lowered the temperature to 78.
<Indeed; the optimal, i.e., the healthiest, range for Platies is
22-25 C/72-77 F. Above that, they start to get stressed. This is
perhaps marginally less true for farmed Platies compared to wild ones,
but it's still basically true.>
After a few weeks at 78 degrees a few of the fish became sick (one had
PopEye, one had fin rot). I was able to nurse them all back to health
in a separate quarantine tank. I should note from the outset that my 15
gallon tank has 0 ammonia, 0 nitrite and 0 nitrate.
<The 15 gallon tank is marginal for Platies; I'd recommend 20
gallons, minimum, for them.>
The pH is 7.6.
<What's the hardness? Platies do need hard water. They hate soft
water, including water from a domestic water softener.>
I decided to raise the temperature back to 80 because at this
temperature none of the fish seemed to contract any illness. Because my
water quality had always been excellent I didn't feel that I could
improve it in any way such that I could otherwise prevent any sickness
so that's why I went with the temperature increase.
<Understandable, but I don't feel these things are
related.>
Yesterday in New York it was a hot day (reached 80 degrees outside). I
noticed that the temperature in my tank was rising and seemed to go as
high as 81.9.
<These short term temperature hikes shouldn't harm Platies or
Swordtails.
They do come from Mexico after all, so have evolved to tolerate hot
summers. Platies in particular are extremely adaptable fish.>
First I checked that the thermometers were accurate (they were), that
the heater was working properly (it was) and that the hood lights had
not overheated (they didn't...I use fluorescent).
<These will still crank out more heat than you expect.>
I did a small water change to try and bring the temperature closer to
80.
Yet the temperature continued to increase. The temperature in the
apartment could not have been higher than 74 degrees at a maximum.
<In theory then, without a heat source, your tank should be at 74 F.
Try switching off the heater for a day and see what happens. Won't
harm your fish if your tank temperature drops down to 74 F. Likewise,
try switching off the lights (though not for more than a day or two if
you have live plants). Again, without these sources of heat, your tank
should reach equilibrium with room temperature, assuming there's no
extra heat input, e.g., direct sunlight.>
I understand that in the winter months, the powerhead that I use, the
lights and the heater could have combined for a steady 80 degrees
without a problem, but is it possible that all these devices together
are causing too much heat now that the temperature outside is warming
up?
<Easily.>
If for some reason the apartment had been 90 degrees or hotter than the
tank water then I could understand the increase in temperature. But I
don't know why it would increase when the ambient air was still
cooler than the water.
<Indeed. Water temperature can only rise above air temperature if
there's a heat source, the three relevant ones in fishkeeping being
the heater, the lights, and direct sunlight.>
The heater was not turning itself on at all yesterday since the water
was obviously already over 80 degrees.
<Don't trust the temperature settings on your heater. The
numbers on the dial are VERY approximate. In summer, even here in
England, I often switch heaters off. Daily rises and falls in water
temperature as your home warms up and cools down is absolutely fine for
(most) tropical fish, the exceptions (perhaps) being things like
Discus.>
So it seemed to me like a combination of the lights and the powerhead
could have resulted in the increase. This concerns me for the summer
months ahead. I know I was pushing the limit keeping the platies at 80
degrees (and they were thriving, by the way...very active, swimming,
eating, playing, etc), but I don't want the temperature to increase
anymore.
<Believe me, a daily rise to 80 F won't harm your Platies. What
isn't good for them is year-around maintenance at above 77 F.
They're lowland fish that live in quite cool ponds and streams (by
tropical fish standards, anyway) and appreciate slightly cool
conditions, much like Corydoras, Swordtails, Black Phantom Tetras,
Neons, and quite a few other tropical fish.>
I looked into aquarium chillers but they are very expensive. it seems
like a cooling fan might be an option, but I do question whether they
are effective.
<Opening the top of the tank and placing a fan nearby can work, but
with the usual caveat about placing mains electrical appliances near
water.
Personally, this isn't something I'd do because there's the
risk of fish jumping out. If it's really hot, you can float a big
ice block in the water -- a litre block frozen inside a Tupperware
works great. But honestly, I
think the problem here is the heater, lights, and/or sunlight.>
Keeping the air conditioning on all day is unfortunately, not an
option.
Yes, I can keep the lights out for longer periods of time, but even
when I experimented with this yesterday, it did not bring down the
temperature in the tank. If I continue to use the powerhead to infuse
oxygen directly into the water, will this offset the negative
consequences of the higher temperature (decreased oxygen saturation)
such that the fish will be ok?
<Yes, extra oxygen will offset problems with high temperatures, but
the main thing in freshwater aquaria is really improving circulation
around the tank rather than actually adding bubbles.>
I know that at higher temp levels the water cannot hold as much oxygen,
so if I am blowing oxygen directly into the tank will this offset this
possible problem? Or is the simple fact that the water is at 81.9
degrees the problem itself?
<Continually warm water will have less oxygen, and that causes
problems for both the fish *and* the filter bacteria. That in turn can
cause problems with water quality, and of course if a fish needs more
oxygen than it can get, it's likely to be stressed, and that can
lead to random health issues such as Pop-eye. But with all this said, I
think you'd see your Platies gasping at the surface if they were
acutely heat stressed. Cooler conditions for Platies is more about
improving their long-term health than about fixing short-term health
problems and/or injuries. Pop-eye and Finrot both suggest environmental
issues -- water quality, water chemistry in particular -- though
physical injury from fighting cannot be ruled out.>
Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance.
Liz
<Hope this helps, Neale.>
Re: Temperature question 4/12/11
Hi Neale,
<Elizabeth,>
Thanks for the quick response.
<No problem.>
In response to your comment about tank size, I should mention that I am
in the process of cycling a 30 gallon tank and hope to move the platies
there within the next few weeks.
<Real good.>
I don't know what the hardness level of the water is. But the pH
rarely varies at all, which leads me to believe it is hard. How should
I test what the level is?
<A general hardness test kit will do the trick nicely. But assuming
you don't draw water from a domestic water softener, if you have
things like kettles and shower heads that "fur" up over a few
months, you likely have hard water.>
You mentioned that short term temperature hikes shouldn't affect
the platies, but what do you mean by short term? Do you mean only a day
or two here and there or do you mean for 3 months of the entire summer
in NYC?
<The latter. Three months of around 80 F shouldn't cause
tropical fish undue harm.>
It can get quite hot in the city for 3 months every year. If their
being in water just under 82 degrees for 3 months doesn't concern
you then I'd be relieved to hear that. I know consistent
temperature and small changes over long periods of time are most
important.
<Actually, the reverse is usually healthier. Tropical fish
experience cooler nights and warmer days, and fish from coastal and
subtropical habitats may even experience cooler winters compared to
summers. Oftentimes, people who breed fish find temperature changes are
essential to get fish to spawn. So yes, while exposing fish to rapid
water temperature changes is bad, and tropical fish certainly
shouldn't be kept in unheated coldwater tanks, small daily
variations of a couple of degrees, and slightly larger seasonal
variations between summer and winter, shouldn't cause any harm at
all.>
I did actually have the heater off yesterday just to be sure that it
wasn't heating without my knowing it. Despite having the heater
off, the temperature was still significantly higher than the room
temperature. I can try keeping the lights off for a day to see if that
makes much of a difference.
<Yes, do try this; lights can produce much more heat than you
expect, especially in hoods with poor/no ventilation, as is often the
case with hoods and tanks aimed at the low end of the market. I've
got a couple of such tanks, and as I say, in summer I often turn the
heaters off, or at least right down to 18 C/64 F, so that the tank
warms up in the day from the lights and then cools down at night when
the lights are off.>
I have a small quarantine tank also and the only difference in setup
between that tank and my 15 gallon tank is the powerhead in the 15
gallon tank. The quarantine tank remained at a steady 80 degrees all
day during the warm weather while the 15 gallon tank increased
temperature. This lead me to believe that it was the powerhead that
might have been heating up the water. I could stop using it, but I like
the idea of infusing extra oxygen into the tank. Even when the
powerhead isn't blowing 'bubbles' into the tank (I have it
on a low setting) it is still moving the water round with a steady
stream of movement.
<Good.>
In response to your comment about the factors that could affect water
temperature, I should note that the tank is not anywhere near direct
sunlight so I can rule that out as a factor.
<Good.>
I will bring the temperature back down into the 77 range (the weather
is cool again now). So even if when the weather warms up and the
temperature fluctuates from 77 to 80 or from 78 to 81 over the course
of a day, you don't think this will be stressful for them?
<No; daily fluctuations of 2-3 degrees are not harmful at all, at
least not for most freshwater fish (marine fish are somewhat different
because sea temperature tends to change more slowly).>
Is it better for me to maintain the water at 80 degrees now until the
summer is over so that the daily fluctuations will be less? And then
once the weather cools down again, keep them at 77?
<An 27 C/81 F maximum in summer should cause Platies no undue harm,
though slightly cooler would be optimal. But otherwise, the ideal
temperature for Platies is no higher than 24 C/75 F. Choose companion
species accordingly, things like Peppered Corydoras and Danios being
obvious and ideal tankmates that also need/prefer low-end tropical
conditions. Don't keep Platies with things that need very warm
water, e.g., Angels. Cheers, Neale.>
Freshwater heating query (FAO Neale if possible -
thanks!) 2/19/11
Dear WWM Crew Member,
I have a quick question on heaters, which I'm hoping you can help
me with.
<Will try!>
I'm presently looking for a new heater for my freshwater
goldfish tank (120l), because the one that came with the tank
only goes down to 20 degree Celsius and I'd prefer something that
has the capacity to heat to 18. Over the years I've noticed a few
remarks (mostly by Neale) recommending or warning against particular
brands, but these have proven very hard to find with the search
function because I regrettably didn't keep a note of the names.
<I see.>
The freshwater heater FAQs didn't have what I was looking for
either, and the search function did provide me with a very helpful
article on recommended tropical tank heaters but not with a counterpart
for cooler tanks.
<Unless your room temperature gets below 18 C, you probably
won't need a heater to keep subtropical or coldwater fish happy.
Indeed, such tanks may work best if the heater is only switched on in
wintertime, and the rest of the time the tank is allowed to heat up and
cool down with the room.>
I was therefore wondering if you might kindly provide me with a
recommendation for a brand(s) and perhaps also a note of which should
be avoided, based on your experience.
<Generally, you get what you pay for. While I'll buy cheap
heaters if funds are tight, I do accept that these may only last 5
years or so. For whatever reason, cheap heaters do seem prone to
problems after a certain length of time. In any case, probably the best
heaters come from companies like Eheim, who produce the Eheim Jager
aquarium heater line. If you want a laugh, take a look at this
video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dbDFbcd8kA0
Does give you an indication of the difference in build quality between
the Eheim and the generic heater, though you should NEVER, EVER place a
hot heater in an aquarium. Besides the Eheim units, heaters from other
well-known names such as Fluval, Tetra, etc. should be fine too.
I've used Juwel heaters and like them, and the Hydor ETH external
heater is a nice unit if you have an external canister filter.>
Thank you very much for your time, and thank you as ever for the
fantastic site. I can't tell you how much I appreciate your help
(direct and indirect) over the years.
Kind regards,
Sarah
<Thanks for the kind words. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Freshwater heating query (FAO Neale if possible -
thanks!) 2/19/11
Hi Neale,
Many thanks for your help, that was ideal (and one scary video!).
Unfortunately my living room is often below 18C - downside of being a
student in a northern latitude - so I think I'll check out the
Eheim range. Hope you enjoy your weekend!
All the best,
Sarah
<Hmm'¦ Sarah, how cold is your home? I'm in England,
and coldwater fish are routinely kept in unheated tanks here, including
things like weather loaches, dwarf Mosquitofish, bitterling, and so on,
not just goldfish. Subtropical fish do need a heater, even if it only
comes on when the weather gets cold, but most homes should be no colder
than 18 C during the day (a degree or two colder at night will do no
harm). In any event, a good, reliable heater is a wise investment.
Cheers, Neale.>
Tropical Temps and Goldfish Magic? (RMF, is your Mandarin
better than mine?)<<Marginally>> 2/19/11
Hello WWM crew!
<Salve!>
It has been a great while since I have contacted you guys, but I have
been a daily reader of your FAQs. Such great info to be learned
everyday here.
Great job and a special thanks to Neale for spending his valuable time
to share his invaluable knowledge regarding freshwater fish.
<Glad to help.>
Now reading on the current FAQs, a question comes to my mind as to the
appropriate temp to keep my tanks at. Through previous research, I have
kept my Scleropages jardinii, Polypterus senegalus, and Panaque
nigrolineatus tanks at 79 degrees F.
<This is fine.>
Now, through reading Neale's replies, it seems as though I can keep
these tanks at around 74-76 degrees F without any adverse affects?
<Well, the happy medium for most tropical fish is about 25 C/77 F,
and that is coincidentally the temperature most heaters are set at when
dispatched from the factory. An aquarium book like Baensch's
Aquarium Atlas will provide optimal temperature ranges for each fish
species.>
Lowering the temp, if possible, seems to have so many advantages
anywhere from electrical cost to higher oxygen content to lower
metabolism rates, which equals better water quality overall? Am I right
to assume this is true?
<Pretty much. When kept towards the lower end of their optimal
range, fish do indeed require less food and less oxygen. That's
because their basal metabolic rate is determined by body temperature,
and that in turn depends on water temperature. Needless to say, the
lower their metabolic rate, the longer they'll live. Furthermore,
most fish gear up for breeding when it gets warmer, and at the warmer
end of their temperature range they're more likely to be
territorial, aggressive, and anxious to breed. It's fairly standard
practise with cichlids for example to keep them cooler rather than
warmer when you don't want to deal with breeding behaviour all the
time.
There is a flip side to this though. Some fish show their best colours
at breeding time, so if kept "quiescent" they may not be as
pretty as you'd hope. More seriously, if kept below their optimal
range, they become steadily more prone to digestive disorders,
infections, poor growth, and if kept too cold, death. Do I keep my
tanks towards the cool end of the temperature range? Yes I do. But
I'm also careful not to keep the tanks too cold. If a fish is happy
in the range 24-28 C/75-82 F, then 25/77 F would be my aim.>
Secondly, a little something I would like to share. Check out this
goldfish video that I have found on YouTube when you have time. It gets
interesting at around 1:45.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U0cAMAy-WL4
I have no idea what they are saying.
<Nor I!>
Seems cruel but very amazing. I mean, I have seen little goldfish
tricks swimming through hoops, but this is ridiculous. Do you think
this is some type of visual illusions/magic tricks or vigorous
training?
<Magnets. For a start, the fish aren't actually beating their
tail fins or sculling with the pectoral fins. Even if fish like these
were trained to do tricks -- and Goldfish have been trained to do some
tricks -- they simply can't swim that smoothly or in such tight
turning circles.>
Thought you might be interested. Thanks and have a great year! Andy
<All the best to you, too, Neale.>
Tropical Temps and Goldfish Magic? /RMF
2/19/11
Hello WWM crew!
<Howsit Bruce?>
It has been a great while since I have contacted you guys, but I have
been a daily reader of your FAQs. Such great info to be learned
everyday here.
Great job and a special thanks to Neale for spending his valuable time
to share his invaluable knowledge regarding freshwater fish.
<He is a treasure>
Now reading on the current FAQs, a question comes to my mind as to the
appropriate temp to keep my tanks at. Through previous research, I have
kept my Scleropages jardinii, Polypterus senegalus, and Panaque
nigrolineatus tanks at 79 degrees F. Now, through reading Neale's
replies, it seems as though I can keep these tanks at around 74-76
degrees F without any adverse affects?
<Yes>
Lowering the temp, if possible, seems to have so many advantages
anywhere from electrical cost to higher oxygen content to lower
metabolism rates, which equals better water quality overall? Am I right
to assume this is true?
<It is so>
Secondly, a little something I would like to share. Check out this
goldfish video that I have found on YouTube when you have time. It gets
interesting at around 1:45.
_
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U0cAMAy-WL4&feature=player_embedded_
(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U0cAMAy-WL4&feature=player_embedded)
I have no idea what they are saying. Seems cruel but very amazing. I
mean, I have seen little goldfish tricks swimming through hoops, but
this is ridiculous. Do you think this is some type of visual
illusions/magic tricks or vigorous training?
<Neat illusions... the jerkiness of the first episode's fishes
leads me to wonder if they're not being led about by implanted
magnets matched and moved below. The second, sleight of hand>
Thought you might be interested. Thanks and have a great year!
Andy
<Thank you Andy. Bob Fenner>
Aquarium heater light disturb fish?
1/28/11
Good evening!
You guys are such a wonderful resource for us! Thank you!
<Thanks for the kind words.>
I have two things I've been trying to find answers for and am
having little or no luck. I'm hoping you can help. The first is
regarding my new Stealth heater. I have a 55g planted tank primarily
stocked with Cardinals and Threadfins. There's a couple of Otos and
Kuhlis in there as well. The new model heater has a green LED which
stays on most of the time to let me know the heater is working. This
light is actually bright enough to cause quite a bit of illumination in
the tank and I'm concerned it's disturbing the fish at night.
Is this possible?
<No, wouldn't worry about this at all. If it's really
annoying, use a permanent black marker or even some black tape to cover
the light, though leave at least a little bit visible so you can tell
it's off or on.>
It has enough of a glow to even illuminate the room at night a bit.
<The fish won't care. Compare it to moonlight.>
My second question is about vibration. I have 2 Eheim filters on the
tank: a 2215 and a 2028. I have placed my ear up against the tank and
can hear and feel the hum of the filters. If I'm feeling and
hearing them then certainly the fish are, too.
<For sure.>
The filters are already on the floor below the tank sitting on foam
material isolated from direct contact with the tank so the only conduit
for this is the tubing. I thought perhaps I could create a type of
'silencer' for the filters by taking a piece of PVC pipe,
placing several discs in it with holes in them at varying levels and
placing this pipe in line with the tubing. Like a silencer for a gun.
It's a bit of work and I'm wondering if there is a better way.
Any suggestions?
<Again, this bothers you more than them. In the wild the water they
live in is extremely noisy, partly from splashing and partly from the
activity of other animals. We think underwater is quiet because our
ears work poorly in water; actually, the underwater world is extremely
noisy, arguably more so than land because water conducts sound so much
better. In short, the fish are used to this, and because the sound is
continual, they soon "tune" it out. Sudden noises like
slamming doors are far more stressful to them. If you want, use towels
or cork tiles to make soft pads to deaden sound a bit, but it really
doesn't matter.>
Thanks again for all of your information over the years. I truly
appreciate having you guys out there.
Beverley
<Cheers, Neale.>
Death by heater? 11/21/10
Hello, crew. I have a 10 gallon freshwater quarantine tank with 3 Neons
in it. These 3 Neons have been in there for 3 weeks, and have been
doing just fine. They swam around quite happily. Numbers are ammonia:
0, nitrite: 0, nitrate: 0. I had a 50 watt heater in the tank. Once the
weather here got cold, the temperature in the tank dropped from 72 down
to between 65 and 68. I bought a lid for the aquarium and it helped by
keeping it more steadily around 68 degrees, but I wanted it warmer. So
last night I went and bought a 100 watt heater with an adjustable
thermostat. I set it for 72 degrees and placed it in the tank, plugged
it in, and then unplugged the 50 watt heater.
This morning, my tank is at 71 degrees. My fish, though, are all dead.
All three. I felt the water, as I have read before about extra
electricity in the water, but no discernible shock. Any ideas as to
what happened? Should I just assume it was the heater and return
it?
Thanks for your time in advance,
Celeste
<Hello Celeste. It's very uncommon for heaters to kill fish.
However, it's quite easy to misuse a heater. Let's start off by
pointing out that the temperature dial on the heater is very
approximate. Always assume it'll be off a few degrees. That's
why you need a thermometer. So, when you add a new heater, turn the
dial to the LOWEST temperature suitable for the fish being kept. Since
Neons are happy between 22-25 C/72-77 F, you'd set a new heater to
22 C/72 F. Wait a day or so for the water temperature to become
steady. If, after a couple of days the temperature is too cool or too
warm, you can adjust the thermostat up or down very slightly, perhaps
one "notch" on the dial. Wait another couple of days, and see
what happens. Repeat until you get to the right temperature for the
fish being kept. For a 10-gallon tank a 75-watt heater should be
adequate. The problems with a 100-watt heater are two-fold. Firstly,
it'll warm up the water very quickly, and potentially pockets of
very warm water around the heater could stress the fish if there
isn't enough water circulation in the tank.
Secondly, the heater on/off mechanism inside the heater will be
switching off and on more often, and that means it'll be wearing
out faster. Heaters have a limited lifespan even in the best
circumstances, and the cheaper brands especially tend to last maybe 5
years or so before they start malfunctioning. In any case, as I said
before, it's unlikely the heater killed the fish outright. Nine
times out of ten water quality is the issue.
If this is a new tank, assume water quality is suspect, even if you
detected no ammonia and nitrite after the fish were dead. Cycle the
filter for a couple more weeks before adding more fish. Do that by
adding tiny
pinches of flake food, and doing the usual 25% water changes at the
weekend. When you do add more Neons, choose obviously healthy stock --
farmed Neons are plagued with Neon Tetra Disease -- and add six at once
to avoid the stress caused by being kept in too-small a group. Frankly,
Neons aren't among my favourite fishes because of their poor
survival rate in recent years, so I would encourage you to review your
options in terms of other species, especially if your water is hard and
alkaline. White Cloud
Mountain Minnows for example are generally much more adaptable and
easier to keep. Incidentally, they don't need a heater unless your
home is very cold. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Death by heater? 11/22/10
Thanks for your reply, Neal. Just for clarification purposes, the tank
is not 3 weeks old. It is my quarantine tank for new arrivals. The
Neons had been in for 3 weeks. I started the tank a few months back
using media from already established tanks, with the 50 watt heater
being the only new addition. The filter was from my well established
beta/African dwarf frog tank, and I let the tank cycle a few weeks with
food before I put in any fish, and the Neons are not my first set of
fish to be in quarantine there.
The only heaters the local pet stores have are 50 watt or 100 watt,
both recommended by the packaging and the pet stores for 10 gallon
aquariums. I drove an hour today to my favorite specialized pet store,
thinking that even if they didn't have a 75 watt heater, it would
be fun to visit, but alas, they were closed for a power outage. (I
can't imagine the type of havoc a power outage in a fish store
would do, and certainly hope they had generator power for at least the
tanks.) Anyway, I have returned the 100 watt heater and ordered the 75
watt Marineland Visi-Therm heater. I hope to have it here by the end of
the week. With the 100 watt heater, I did set it to 72, as I know the
thermostats on the heaters themselves are not always accurate. I also
have a separate thermostat in the tank, which I rely on for the
temperature of the tank.
As per your other suggestion, back when I started in this hobby, Neons
were always talked about as being so hardy, it was what was recommended
for use to cycle tanks (in the days before I found wet web media, of
course). But I looked some more tonight, and will probably go with the
black Neons instead. They'll be going into a bigger tank with
Danios and Rasboras.
Thanks again!
Celeste
<Glad to help. I'm just not a big fan of the farmed Neon tetra,
and while losing three all at once is unusual, I'd record an
"open verdict" on their deaths for now and go with something
else. Do check your water chemistry is appropriate -- pH is largely
irrelevant provided it's within about 6 and 7.5 for most tetras --
but water hardness is crucial, and few species truly do well above 15
degrees dH, and most should be kept below 10 degrees dH.
Black Neons are fairly robust in soft to medium hardness water, but can
be difficult to keep in hard water. Cheers, Neale.>
Heaters too tall for a 20 gallon long
6/16/10
Hello:
I was wondering about heaters for a 20 gallon long. There are these
heaters called Ebo-Jager, I believe. They have a 100 watt heater and it
has the best reviews of other heaters out there in the US lots of
adjustment options. The problem is it is 12 inches long. My 20 gallon
long is 12 inches high, so that doesn't seem like the right choice.
Most of the heaters you can buy on the net, do not even tell you if
they have lots of adjustment options either.
I was wondering if it is ok to put a 75 watt in a 20 gallon long, that
one is 9 inches long. I live in Georgia in the US and we do not turn
the heat on during the "winter" here. It can get chilly in
the house and the tank temp can drop to the low 60's, I know
because once we forgot to plug in the heater for 3 days last winter and
the temp read in the low 60's. Anyway if I got the 75 watt, would
it be on too much over the winter wearing it out sooner. All the 100
Watts I am looking at are too long. Any ideas? Thank you
<You can place a heater diagonally or even flat, if you put it an
inch or two above the gravel. In any case, if your average room
temperature doesn't drop far below 15 C/59 F, then a relatively low
wattage heater should be
ample, and the 75 W should do the trick nicely. All standard aquarium
heaters come with built-in thermostats, hence being called
"heater-stats".
These are preset to 25 C/77 F, which is about right for most fish, if a
bit high for things like Neons, Danios and Corydoras, and a bit low for
a very few fish, notably Discus and Ram Cichlids. So by all means leave
your heater at the default setting initially, but use a thermometer to
check water temperature and adjust the heater up or down as required.
Even here in England I can leave the heater off during summer, and
daily variations between 18-25 C/68-77 F are fine for most fish.
Cheers, Neale.>
Heater malfunction 10/27/09
Hi,
<Hello,>
I've been using your site for years and love it! I am writing to
you because a few days ago, my heater malfunctioned (Freshwater
tropical setup, 29 gallon), making the tank water very hot (the stick
on thermometer must be faulty though since it still showed 78). So
I'm not sure how high the temp was but it felt like hot shower
water and ice melted immediately when we put it in the tank. Other than
that, the water parameters are fine. The temp is now back to 78 (new
thermometer). This was three days ago.
Yesterday one fish died and two more died today. The remaining fish
look bad, like almost black in color and laying at the bottom of the
tank. Is there any chance of survival for these fish?
<Yes, a good chance if they're still alive now.>
If not, I'd like to euthanize them but really don't want to if
there's hope for them still. Hope to hear from you soon,
Elizabeth
<It goes without saying you need to replace the heater. Also, buy
one just big enough for the tank, i.e., if you have a 29 gallon tank,
buy one suitable for tanks up to that size but not substantially
larger. Assuming
the room is centrally heated, a 100-150 W unit should be ample. Avoid
getting heaters that are far too big, since if these "stick"
in the on position, they'll harm the fish much more quickly than a
smaller heater.
Conversely, don't get a heater that's too small for the tank.
If the heater has to stay on all the time, it's more likely to
fail. To some extent, you get what you pay for with heaters. Having got
through any number of glass
heaters in my time, I can tell you that buying the cheapest one in the
shop is rarely wise! Look for a brand you know and trust. The best
glass heaters are probably the Eheim Jager Aquarium heaters. Cheers,
Neale.>
Temperature Problem, waste heat in an African Cichlid
sys. 2/13/09 Hi, <Hello,> I have a 178
Gallon African Cichlid tank. I'm using the Fluval FX5 for
filtration. It has been set up for about 2 weeks now. I only have 6
very small cichlids. Last night I noticed the temperature was around
81f which was strange because my heater was set to 78f. Just to make
sure the heater wasn't malfunctioning I unplugged it. When I woke
up the temp was 87f!! What is going on here? <If you've
unplugged the heater (double check you have, and not unplugged
something else by accident) the heat is coming from three possible
sources: Firstly, the lights. These can run hot if you have a lot of
them. Two fluorescent tubes normally have little impact, but 4 or more
will do. So check this, and if necessary, increase ventilation inside
the hood. Secondly, direct sunlight. This is surprisingly good at
warming up tanks, even on "cold" days. It's the infrared
that makes the difference, not the warmth of the air. Close the
curtains on windows that are allowing sunlight to shine into the tank.
Finally, central heating of your home. If the tank is near a heating
vent or a radiator, it will warm up substantially.> It is very cold
outside (about 37f) and my house temp is set to 68f. I have no idea
what is happening. Could my filter be malfunctioning and heating the
water (filter seems to be running normal)? <Unlikely. There are
thermo-filters that deliberately warm the water, but you would
presumably know that you'd bought one of these. Otherwise, no, the
heater motor itself isn't hot enough to heat a tank.> Please
help if you can. Do I need to buy a chiller unit? <Probably not. Do
also consider the thermometer might be broken. The sticky liquid
crystal ones in particular seem to go bad sometimes.> It just seems
strange when it isn't even hot in here. <Strange indeed.>
Thanks!! <Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Temperature Problem 2/13/09 Thanks
for your response! 1: The tank is not in direct sunlight, plus the
problem happened overnight when it was dark. <OK.> 2: The tank is
not near a heating vent either. the room temp is 68f. <OK.> 3:
The thermometer is not broken, I can feel the water is warm to the
touch, plus I tested it outside the tank and its working ok. <OK>
I was wrong I didn't unplug the heater I just set the temp to very
low. I think maybe the heater is busted and just was pumping heat into
the tank all night. <A-ha! Heaters do "jam". Especially
common if the heater is being used in a proportionally big tank, so
that the heater is on most of the time. It's best to use two
smaller heaters in big tanks. That way, if one jams, the other is too
small to boil the fish. Conversely, if one fails, the other will at
least stop the heat loss being so rapid your fish will die. It's
good advice to get a mid-priced heater; the cheapest ones do seem to
have an unacceptably high failure rate.> Now the heater is
completely out of the tank. I have a fan blowing on the surface of the
water and the temp is still high (84f). I'll give it some time and
hopefully it will cool off. If not I have no idea what to do. <It
will cool down. Take care not to chill your fish though!> Thanks!
<Cheers, Neale.>
Beginner Chiller Questions,
FW, and GF sys. 4/28/08 Hello Crew, How are you today? <I'm fine, thanks>
I think I've come to the conclusion that I may need a
chiller. <Okay> I currently own a 75 gallon FW tank. It
houses two comet goldfish and a Pleco. I know the comets can
accept a wide range of temps, but much higher than 80 will
probably be bad for all involved. <Mmm, not if permanently too
high, or too vacillating... Let's see> I like to keep the
temperature around 73 degrees Fahrenheit/23 degrees Celsius. This
is because this is on the upper scale for the comets and the
lower end for the Pleco. All seem happy with this temp.
<Yes> Since I just recently upgraded to the 75 gallon (last
October), I wanted to make sure I purchased the max I could
afford. I bought the glass lids instead of the plastic hood, and
I bought a triple-tube fluorescent light since I wanted to make
some algae for my Pleco (and he does a good job of keeping things
clean). I also purchased a Rena XP 4 filter. I'm looking into
getting a new one, but if I do need a chiller, I'll have to
wait on that. The lights are 32W per tube, so that's roughly
96W of heat assuming no losses (I know, very simple assumption).
I have a hang-in refugium that has a small 7W powerhead for the
Anacharis I purchased to try to help with Nitrates. <Good>
They are doing well and this was only purchased to stop the fish
from eating the plants to death. It hangs just below the water
line so the plants receive a great deal of light. Also, the
filter runs at 31W, so assuming 100% heat dump from both (another
simple assumption) I now have about 140W of heat dump into the
system. <Mmm, as you say, minus losses> Here's the
problem. When I run the lights during the day and the apartment
heats up (we're talking up to 75-76 degrees F, if you call
that heating up), the aquarium can easily reach upwards of 78-79
degrees F. I tried to remedy the situation over the past few days
by raising up the lights on about a 1" shim, putting a
12" fan running against the side and front of the aquarium,
removing a tube from the fixture to reduce heat, and then finally
by raising both glass access flaps to help aid in evaporation
cooling (see, I am reading the FAQs!!! ;) ). <Heeeee!
You're ready to start writing them!> Nothing seemed to
work. Even with ambient air temperatures around 72 degrees and
all the "fixes" in place, the temp in the tank still
rises to around 76-77 degrees F. <No big deal> So I went on
to my next idea which I haven't finished yet. I plan on
putting three 120mm fans connected up to a converter that I
purchased at Radio Shack, and then implementing those into the
left side of my aquarium to blow down on the water, and on the
other side put just a screen mesh so that air can get out, but
fish can't. <Good> But, here's the catch. I'm a
meteorologist, so I know a little bit about thermodynamics and
air temperatures. I live in Philadelphia. The summers here are
pretty humid most times. Strike one on evaporation cooling.
Second, I know that even with the fans going and the humidity
low, the water can only be cooled down to ambient air
temperature. The air exiting the tank theoretically could get
lower (wet bulb temp), but even then, the humidity inside the
apartment will quickly rise leaving an equilibrium of eventually
air temperature when ambient reaches wet bulb, or 100% humid.
Strike two against air cooling. Finally, when I leave my
apartment, I turn the A/C up to 82F to save energy and money. I
don't like $250 electric bills, and that's what it costs
around here if I keep the A/C at a friendly 75F during the
morning and night when I'm here. I could only imagine the
price if it was that temp 24/7. I also plan to go on vacation
during the summer for around 10 days, and this combined with the
thermostat at 82F will definitely not keep the tank cool,
regardless if I turn off the lights or not. Strike three, no?
<Again... I think you'll be fine...> So I started to
take another look at the chillers. Man, are they pricey. On top
of that, there is no unique guide to sizing the things. Some
sites say 1/10 HP goes up to 130 gallons, where some say only 50
gallons. <There are differences in efficiency... and
insulation...> I have looked at the JBJ Arctica and the
Current USA Prime coolers. I was looking at the 1/10 HP models
since that's what the JBJ site sized out for me. but I wanted
to ask you guys to make sure this sounds ok. I could go up to the
1/5 HP from JBJ (I want quiet, and you guys said in one of the
chiller FAQs that was high on the list) if you think that's
what I need, but I'd hate to buy a V12 when a V6 can do the
job more efficiently and still have room to grow if needed. I
also don't want to short-cycle the compressor or cause rapid
spikes in temperatures for the fish. <Mmm, yes... these
devices consume electricity as well...> I wanted to do inline
instead of drop-in since I read here that drop-ins are very
inefficient. <Agreed. They're inappropriate tech. for most
all applications> I wanted to connect the chiller up right
after my XP4 since then I wouldn't have to purchase a new
pump or anything. The XP4 says it has a 450GPH flow, and I bet
that's probably without any media inside. My only reservation
with that was that I didn't see any kind of flow curve or
documentation on how restrictive the chillers are. I've
water-cooled computers before so reading those charts does give
an idea of flow rates and pump needs. The last thing I want to do
is kill my filter pump. <Yes... and this may well do it. The
small head magnetic drive pumps for these filters are not meant
to encounter any/much induced drag> The JBJ says that it can
handle up to 960 GPH through it - great considering I may end up
getting a second filter anyway in the long run and pairing both
filters into a Y tube that goes into the chiller, then splitting
back out of a Y tube to two outputs. That would give roughly a
max 900 GPH flow through the chiller. <A bit less in actual
practice... like half> Anyway, sorry to make a short story
long. But I hope you have some insight for me. I'm really
confused on what to do since not a whole lot of people seem to be
in my position. Most have metal halide lighting, sumps, etc. I
don't. My setup is pretty simple, and I keep it that way
since I know the more complicated I make it, the more I'm
going to mess something up and potentially kill my fish (i.e. the
reason I don't have a sump is because I don't know how to
keep it from siphoning my tank out, and what happens in a power
failure?!?). Maybe one day I will start to use a sump since I do
have a spare 20 gallon that I moved up from. I'd like a
de-nitrate tank and I know I could get one with either a planted
sump or a deep sand bed. just gotta figure out the whole
water-draining scenarios first. <Neat! Sounds like a worthy
project> It scares me to get a call from apartment management
telling me my 75 gallons all drained into the apartment below and
that my fish are now gone. I know they were only 70 cent feeder
fish. but I still can't fathom such an inhumane death. Weird,
I know. Anyway, let me know if you can help, and if you can I
greatly appreciate it. And so does my wallet. John Lindsay
<John, I would maybe shift your lighting schedule, with one or
more on-off cycles per day... have the lights come on (and maybe
go off) till later in the day, eve, when it's cooler... Is
what I do for my fancy goldfish here in S. Cal. (where it was 90
F. ayer)... Not a problem, really... In the volume you have, the
species you care for, all this will work out... Keep doing those
20-25% water changes every week and no worries. Bob
Fenner>
Re: Beginner Chiller
Questions 4/29/08 Bob, <John> Thank
you for the reply. <Welcome> I tend to agree with you about
the fact that as long as it isn't a continuous situation,
I'd be ok. However, my idea with the fans didn't work as
well as I thought. They don't fit, and I don't have the
tools necessary (I am just out of college in my first job with an
apartment - no time to have purchased the right equipment, plus
the right equipment to do so, like just a rip saw or table saw,
is about at much as a chiller) to implement the right design.
<Understood> So, if my air temperature still stays at 82F
for the week and a half I'm gone, with the fact that no
cool-down will occur at night since I won't be home to
monitor the temps, and the same for during the day when I keep
the A/C on at 82F... are you recommending the chiller or not? I
don't know if I got a true answer, but perhaps you were
leaving it up for me to decide since it is my purchase!!! :)
<Am advising against such purchase, use. I don't use
one...> I know that 77 isn't a worry for temps... but the
fact that when the apartment is at 72 the temp is at 77, and when
I have the apartment at 75 I know the tank will heat up to around
79, I can only imagine when the air in the apartment is at 82...
the tank will rise to around 85+ which I know is too hot for any
fish... <Not really... if one thinks/considers that the
back-up, redundancy processes/mechanisms on a space shuttle or
submarine are impressive, they should take a look at the
capability of shifting biochemical pathways in biotic systems...
MUCH more impressive> I'm just trying to make sure I
don't come home to dinner one day. <Not to worry, I assure
you> Thank you so much for your help. I know it has been time
consuming with my last e-mail! John Lindsay <A pleasure to
share. BobF>
|
Re: Emergency with clown loach
01/13/2008 Hi Neale, Thanks so much for your response.
Unfortunately, Mr. Whiskers was gone this morning. He was cocooned in a
thick coat of slime from barbels to tail. I also discovered the
problem...when I reached in to get him, the water was so hot a human
would be uncomfortable in a bath of that temp. Apparently the heater
malfunctioned and super heated the water overnight. It must have
started glitching the day before when Mr. Whiskers had just a little
slime reaction; just a few degrees hot enough to affect a delicate
clown loach but not enough to tell anything was amiss. Then over last
night it went wild and...my favorite, most personable fish gone. What
is so frustrating is I always went the extra mile doing everything
right for such a special specimen...weekly changes, constant
testing...but everything can be wiped away with just a malfunctioning
heater. I assume the little loach died too; I'm going to search the
tank for his body. All the cichlids and Plecos seem okay, so far...I
had unplugged the heater and threw in some ice packs. It took hours for
the temperature reader to register upper nineties, so my guess is the
temp went up past 100. A horrible way to go. Again, thanks for your
quick response, I just wish I had caught the problem before it was too
late. Take care, Katey <Hello Katey. A horrible story, and you have
my commiserations. Let me share a useful tip though: with valuable
collections of fish (and which collection of fish isn't valuable?)
use two too-small heaters instead of one adequate one. So suppose your
tank needs 100 W of heating. Don't use a single 100 W heater but
instead two 75 W heaters. Why? Because if one heater jams, it won't
have enough power to boil your fish (at least, not quickly, giving you
time to notice the problem). Conversely, if one heater fails, the other
one will still be powerful enough to slow down the heat loss enough for
you to notice the problem in time, and the tank certainly won't get
so cold the fish freeze. You still need to check the heaters from time
to time, but at least you'll have the peace of mind of knowing that
either way, your fish will be safe. Hope everyone else in the tank
settles back down, Neale.>
Heating Substrate 11/29/07 I was about to stick a
reptile heating pad on the bottom of our 75 gallon tank thinking that
the water\substrate would prevent hot spots that would cause stress
cracks. Boy I'm I glad I researched your forum first. Our tank
rests on an open metal stand made of angle iron and the bottom glass is
completely exposed. That said; I'm considering the use of the
heating pad on a metal plate of some fashion under the tank. The plate
would be installed in a way that prevents contact with the tank glass
but allows the heated air to circulate around the heater\plate and warm
the tank bottom. Efficiency sounds poor at best so I would likely
enclose this heating solution with foil faced Styrofoam to improve
efficiency. <Yes, this insulation will help efficiency.> In the
end, I think all I've accomplished is placing the tank over a low
temperature oven. I would appreciate your advice and insight towards
substrate heating solutions. I have to say that the warm water tubing
may be my best choice. <A quick internet search of substrate heaters
will give you several options here. There are several companies that
make cable type heaters for just this purpose. Best regards, Scott
V.> <<Well-stated Scott. RMF>>
Heater & Antibiotic... effect on bacteria
11/29/07 Hi Crew, <Hello> I thought of putting a heater
and setting it to 32 deg. C as weather is getting cooler. In your
opinion, will this temp. setting kills off my beneficial bacteria
(in mature tank)? <That will be too warm for about any system.
What temperature does your tank run the rest of the year? What
kind of system is it ? What livestock? It is likely you will need
a heater this time of year, just not that warm.> I'm also
thinking of dosing antibiotic into my tank for the purpose of
boosting my fishes health, is this advisable or harmful? Pls.
advise. <This will kill the beneficial bacteria you were
referring to. If your fish are otherwise healthy there will be no
reason to treat them. If they have something wrong with them it
needs to be diagnosed and treated with the appropriate
medication.> Thank you. Regards. Alan <Welcome, Scott
V.>
Hi Crew, <Hello.> Thanks. for the prompt
reply. <Welcome> Further to my questions, since 32 deg. C
is considered too warm, what's the more appropriate
temperature then? <Again depends on the type of system/fish.
General tropical fish require 25-27 degrees C. Fish such as
goldfish require less, fish such as Discus more.> My main
purpose is too prevent any outbreak of disease (will be away from
home for 4 days) and also one of my fish seems to have some white
dots/stuff (definitely not white spots) on its body. I'm
thinking of raising the temp. so as to kill off whatever causing
this white stuff. Dosing of medication into the tank is out of
the question. Am I doing enough? <In that case you will need
to set up a quarantine tank. Raising the temperature can help,
maybe to 29 deg C. The treatment again depends on the type of
fish involved. Reading through the saltwater/freshwater ich
articles/FAQs will shed some light on what you need to do
next.> Thanks in advance. Regards. Alan <Welcome, good
luck, Scott V.>
|
Re: Fungus ? Now: Heater Requirements -- 08/11/07
Hi Chuck, thanks for your swift reply, I think ill bin the furry bit!
Just a quick one , at what temp do you think I should run my tank? its
normally around 77/78 degrees is this ok? am having prob.s keeping
consistent temperatures, I run a VisiTherm 300 watt heater. Do you
think I should add one more? Thanks < The size of the heater depends
on the ambient room temperature and where you want the temperature to
be. For instance. If your room was 80 F during the summer then you
don't need a heater at all. If you have an air conditioner that
keeps the room at 68 F then your heater has to raise the water temp by
10 degrees F top bring it up to 78 F. Your heater may be placed in a
"dead spot". I mean an area in the tank that doesn't get
much water circulation. Place the heater in an area where the filter
forces the water over it. You should get better hear circulation. BTW,
78 F is just fine for the fish that you have.-Chuck>
Too much heater for the tank? 7/16/07
Hi, First of all, great site! You guys are awesome! <well, one
tries...> I'm setting up my first tank, a 55-gallon with Malawi
cichlids - currently cycling using 10% ammonia. I'd like to use two
heaters, one at either end of the tank, rather than one in the middle
-- I have two Stealth heaters, one 200W and one 150W. I know this is
technically more heating power than I need for a 55-gal, but I'm
wondering if it will do any harm to put the extra heating capacity in
there. <Using two heaters is a very good idea. I do exactly this
myself. The traditional approach here is to use two *slightly
underpowered* heaters, so that if one "sticks" in the on
position, it won't be powerful enough to boil the fish. On the
other hand, if one fails, the other will be just strong enough to keep
the temperature from plummeting too rapidly, giving you the 24 hours
needed to go buy a replacement. One factor to consider is the ambient
temperature of the room. If your home is kept constantly warm, then the
heaters will probably have very little work to do, but if you don't
keep the room so hot, then the heaters will need to work harder (i.e.,
need a higher wattage). Here in England where the climate is quite mild
all year round, it's actually quite easy for tanks to be
*overheated* even with the heater on its lowest setting, especially
coupled with high output lights. Thermal stratification of the water is
yet another factor. Hot lights above and inefficient size/placement of
the water pumps can let cooler water settle at the bottom. What I'm
saying is that it's all a bit trial and error. Put the heaters in
the tank, turn both down to the lowest setting, and see what you get.
Move the thermometer about to check the water is being warmed
uniformly. Turn each heater up a notch and give it a day to see what
happens to the temperature in the tank. Rinse and repeat...> Thanks,
Phil <Cheers, Neale>
Bringing down the temperature... 5/14/07 Hi,
<Greetings.> My tank temperature is at 80 degrees and I want to
know how can I bring the temperature down safely? <Evaporation will
help, so putting an electric fan nearby is one trick. Making sure the
tank isn't in direct sunlight makes a big difference, and best of
all put the tank somewhere shady and cool. Basements are ideal.> Can
I just add ice cubes or add cool water when doing partial water
changes? <You can add ice cubes, but here's a better approach:
take an old plastic 1-litre ice-cream carton or similar. Fill with
water. Put the lid on. Freeze solid. When it's done, float the
carton in the tank (ice being lighter than water floats). This should
last for several hours. When it's melted, put back in the freezer
to re-freeze. If you have two cartons, you can cycle them.> I have a
Calico Fantail goldfish and don't understand why the water temp is
so high. It's cool in the house and I don't have a heater in
there. <Sounds as if direct sunlight is to blame. Water should be
close to air temperature. Slight differences will occur because water
loses/gains heat incredibly slowly (which is actually a good thing -- I
accidentally switched the heater off one tank last night, but it was
only a few degrees cooler the next morning despite the low air
temperature). So if there isn't a heater in the tank, the water
should be somewhere between minimum and maximum air temperature at any
given time. If it's warmer than the air temperature, chances are
direct sunlight is warming the tank. A good clue is the presence of
algae on the glass; algae really thrives on glass getting direct
sunlight.> Thanks, Najla <No problems. Cheers,
Neale>
Temperature fluctuations Hi Crew, Just a quick question
for you on temperature. I have a 66 Gallon Tank with African Cichlids.
We just moved to a new house and now the fish are situated in the
basement. By the way we live in Canada so the nights get cool. In our
other house I had a Tronic 200 watt heater in the tank which seemed to
nicely maintain 80 degrees. However in our new house I notice the
daytime temperature of 80 degrees and when I get up in the morning I
notice the temperature is around 76 or 77 degrees. < The
temperature range for Malawian cichlids is between 75 to 80 degrees so
you are still well within their range.> I have even added
another 100 watt heater. On the back of heater box it says a 200 w
heater is good for 65 gallons so I figured 300 watts should do the
trick. I have the tank about 4 feet from the concrete wall. Should I
add yet another heater or is a 4 degree variance ok? Any other
suggestions? < This all depends on how "Cool" it
gets. Unfortunately glass is a pretty poor insulator. If your tank was
in your home and you kept the house at 65 degrees F. Then a 200 watt
heater might work. If you mean down to the 50's or lower then you
heater could turn into a little night light trying to keep up with the
heat loss. Overall the temp. is fine right now. If it gets below 75 for
any length of time and there may be problems. The higher the temp . the
more breeding you will get and the better your fish will look. Two
things to consider to maintain the water temperature. Add more heat
with another heater and watch your electric bill get even higher or
reduce the heat loss from the tank. Start by placing sheets of
Styrofoam insulation underneath the tank and on the back. This will
help insulate the tank without hindering viewing the fish. Keep the top
tightly sealed too. Lots of heat is lost through openings in the
top.> Also when I moved the tank I saved about 1/4 of the
water and the gravel and also the filter contents. will this be
enough to get the new system running or should I be performing
more frequent water changes then normal? < As long as the
gravel remained wet there should be no problem and the bacteria should
have remained intact.-Chuck> thx Ron
Temperature controller - 03/06/07 Good morning
crew member: <<Hello, Sue. Crew Member Tom at your
service.>> Just a question about temperature controllers used
with heaters containing bi-metallic strips. I understand that the
heater is set to a higher temperature that keeps the unit on all the
time; therefore, do the bi-metallic strips stay in the closed, or on
position continuously? In other words, does the addition of a
temperature controller prevent premature wear and tear on
the bi-metallic strips. <<I think what you might be referring to,
Sue, are temperature controllers designed to protect the tank in the
event of a failure in the bi-metallic switch integrated into the
heater. The temperature setting of the protective controller is set
above the temperature setting of the heater and, in the event that the
temperature of the heater reaches the 'setpoint' of the
protective device, electrical power is shut off to the heater. The
'presumption', if you will, is that the contacts on the
bi-metal strips have welded themselves together resulting in a
'runaway' heating coil. What you've described would be a
'sensible', current-limiting device that, basically, supersedes
the bi-metal switch as the temperature controller for the heater.
Possible? Certainly, but probably prohibitively expensive against the
newer, digitally controlled heaters available (though those aren't
exactly being 'given away', by any stretch). I'd be very
interested if you have an example of what you've described so I can
review it.>> Thank you very much for your time. This website is
the only aquarium source I trust for advice and information. <<I
thank you for all of us, Sue.>> Sue :) <<Tom>>
Cheap heater mistake - 1/22/07 Dear crew,
<<Tom here with you, Celeste.>> The LFS was closed when we
needed it, and so we went ahead and bought a cheap heater at Wal-Mart
for our hospital tank. <<Do I want to guess?>>
Honestly, we didn't know that there was such a danger with cheap
heaters until today with more research. <<I'm
getting a bad feeling'¦>> However, last night the heater
exploded in the tank. <<Yep. That's what the
'feeling' was about.>> It was the middle of the night,
but thankfully, I heard the explosion and saw the
flashes. The smell was horrible and the water had an oily
and black residue floating on the top, along with black powder in the
water and broken glass on the bottom. We grabbed a
Tupperware container, matched the water and scooped the five guppies
out. They were probably in the water for all of five
minutes, and they seem fine this morning, but I haven't been able
to find out much about what the black powder could be and whether we
should be worried about poisoning of the fish.
<<First, congratulations on the fast action. Well done! The black
powder is likely soot (carbon) and shouldn't pose any problem. The
heater element (wire) drew an excessive amount of electrical current
creating a large amount of heat inside of the body of the heater
surrounded by, relatively speaking, cold water. The heater
'tube' was, obviously, not heat-tempered and blew apart under
the thermal stress. (Why my Mom couldn't move a glass cooking dish
directly from the refrigerator to the oven 'in the old days,
that is.) :) >> I'm afraid I don't know the
brand. <<Wish you did, Celeste. I'd love to
advertise it on our site as a brand 'not to buy'.>> We
have since returned the other cheap heater, plus the exploding one, and
bought a better quality, though still glass, heater. <<Glass, in
and of itself, isn't the problem, Celeste. Even with a complete
failure of the heater element, the housing should never have shattered.
The manufacturer cut costs or, was forced to cut costs (are you
listening, Sam Walton? 'Nah, laughin' all the way to bank,
TJ!'), by using inferior materials. Thank God, we're talking
about five Guppies and not five human beings!>>
Thanks, Celeste <<Sorry for 'soap-boxing', Celeste. Hey,
you started it! I'm happy that you reacted quickly and all seems to
be okay, though. Again, good job and, I'm sorry for your
experience. Best regards. Tom>>
Re: Cheap heater mistake
1/23/07 Thanks for your quick reply,
Tom. I appreciate what you guys do. <<You're
welcome, Celeste. And we all appreciate your gratitude.>> When I
came home from work, they were all fine, but about an hour or two
later, one was floating. The explosion took place in a
hospital tank and I wonder if it stressed the fish out further and she
succumbed. <<Hard to know for sure on this one,
Celeste. A pretty violent accident by Guppy standards and one that
would have stressed me more than a bit as well.>> We're
keeping a close eye on the rest. (They're back in a
cleaned out tank with a new heater [not from Wal-Mart], a filter and
cycled water.) <<Sounds good.>> The brand that
exploded was a Tetra Whisper for 2-15 gallons. I thought
Tetra was a good brand. I've heard of other good brands
making products for Wal-Mart that are of cheaper quality then the ones
they sell with their names at other stores. Would that have
happened here, or am I mistaken in that they're a good
name? <<Tetra does have a reputable name in the
hobby/industry, Celeste. In all fairness, this may have been a
"fluke". A flaw in the housing may have led to a material
weakness that allowed the glass to shatter as it did. Coupled, however,
with the failure of the heating control and/or heating element, I'm
feeling a bit restrained in my effort to be "fair" here.
You're quite correct in suggesting that Wal-Mart markets cheaper
quality products from brand-name distributors. Not unknown elsewhere
but Wal-Mart is notorious for ruthlessly pressing their suppliers for
cheaper pricing. Results, all too frequently, in inferior products
being marketed to the consumers who mistakenly believe they're
getting a quality product based on a company's good
name/reputation.>> We don't much care for supporting
Wal-Mart, and we would never, ever by live fish there, but they are
cheaper and open 24 hours....it's a shame that they're like
they are. But I digress...my soap box....the evils of
Wal-Mart are something I could go on and on about, but I'm still
guilty of shopping there. <<Nothing to feel
"guilty" about here, Celeste. If everyone were dissatisfied
with their shopping experiences, Wal-Mart would close. I don't see
that happening so they're doing something right, from their
perspective, anyway. Oh, well...>> Thanks again, and yes,
thankfully it was just guppies this time. <<Amen to that!>>
Celeste <<Hope all continues to go well with the rest of your
Guppies, Celeste. My best to you. Tom>>
Re: Cheap heater mistake... Note re edit
1/23/07 Oh, and I found the caution about
buying cheap heaters in the electrical article rather than the
heater. It might be helpful to add a caution to the heater
article, too. Just a thought. <<And a good one!
Thanks.>> Celeste <<Tom>>
Need help heating my
tank 12/31/06 Hi, <<Hi, Mike, and a Happy New
Year to you. Tom with you.>> I inherited a 200gal
tank this summer and decided to put my two Flowerhorns in it. <<I
should be so lucky! :) >> Everything was fine until winter
came. <<Living in Michigan, you're singing my
song, Mike.>> The tank is located outside the house because it
was too big and it is susceptible to temp changes outside.
<<Oh, yeah'¦>> Ever since the beginning of winter
and the outside temperature got cold my fishes began to eat less, and
now they are not eating at all. It's been a little
over a week now and I'm afraid that they will starve to death. Are
my fishes sick and if so how do I cure them. <<Well, first,
I'd bet they're freezing their little fishy buns off.
That's going to lead to stress and, consequently, a loss of
appetite. As to whether, or not, they're sick, I have no way of
telling from what you've described so far.>> I
had thought they are not eating because I do not have adequate heating
in the tank and they are just cold but I read somewhere that the
temperature should not make them stop eating but just eat
less. <<Kind of subjective, Mike. Could be other
things at work here.>> Also I observed some small tiny worms
swimming in the water. Some are black and some are
clear. They are about a quarter inch in length and just
wiggle around in the water. Is this some kind of parasite
that is making my fishes sick. <<Parasites infest a host to
survive and propagate. If these critters are swimming around,
they're some form of micro-worm, or the like, and are an indication
of poor water conditions. I'd guess they're feeding on the
excess food that your Flowerhorns aren't
consuming.>> Also, can you give me some advice in
regards to heating the tank. Currently my tank only has two
small heaters suitable for maybe a 20 gal tank? I've
been trying to find something to show me how to heat the 200 gal tanks
but nothing too definitive. <<Since I enjoy helping
other folks spend their money, I'd recommend at least two Eheim
(formerly Ebo-Jaeger) 250W heaters, placed at opposite ends of the
tank. Depending on how cold it gets in your neck of the woods, a third
heater may even be necessary but I don't want to get too crazy with
your paycheck. You should be able to pick these up online for about $30
each. The main thing is that you need to get the temperature of the
tank stabilized. Swings up and down aren't doing your fish any good
whatsoever.>> Please help. I really want to try to do this the
right way. <<The other thing you need to do right away, Mike, is
to clean your tank concentrating heavily on the substrate to get rid of
excess food/detritus. Once your conditions are back in order, your
little worm buddies will be a thing of the past.>>
Thanks Mike <<Hope this gets things back on track,
Mike. As an aside, one important aspect of the heaters I mentioned is
that, apart from the high quality of the product, the temperature dial
can be calibrated to the exact temperature of the water. No
compensation necessary. Best of luck to you. Tom>>
Using Reptile Heaters To Heat An Aquarium -
09/13/06 Hi WWM crew. First of all, thanks to Chuck for his input
and cautions. The advice was much appreciated, and I'm now revising
my stocking list accordingly. I was reading a number of FAQs on WWM
(and other sites) regarding the issue of substrate heating in FW plant
tanks. And was debating whether or not it was worth it. However, the
one thing that kept popping up was people discussing how annoying they
are to deal with. At first this seemed strange to me until I realized
that most of the heat cable devices are designed to go IN the
substrate. Yikes! This was not my intention when I first read/heard
about the idea. I have a number of heating devices (heat pads,
terrestrial heat cables, etc.) left over from keeping various reptiles,
and my intention was to attach whichever one fit best on the outside of
the tank (underneath the substrate) using silicone or electrical tape.
I then planned on hooking it up to a rheostat (also left over from
reptile keeping) and tinkering with that until the substrate surface at
1.5" read 78 degrees. These numbers are based on a water temp. of
76 degrees and a total substrate depth of 3". Do you see anything
horribly wrong with this plan? All the devices in question are safe for
use in high humidity and the tank's stand has an open top for use
with overflows and such. So the safety issues should be covered.
I'm still deciding whether or not it's worth another outlet,
but wanted to check to see if this method would be acceptable for
reaping the "benefits" of a heated substrate or if you have
to have the cables IN the substrate. If that's the case... I might
leave that idea by the roadside. Thank you all again for your time and
dedication. -Tyler < Check with the manufacturers of the products to
see if they can be used for this purpose. If one of these products
caused a hot spot under the aquarium it could break or crack the glass
if there is too big a temperature differential. Who is then responsible
for the damage? If it was heating the water then warmer water would
rise in the tank and be replaced with cooler water. Under the gravel
you have restricted water flow and the circulation may not be enough to
cool the glass. It would not be worth it for me and I would purchase a
high quality heater.-Chuck>
Stick On Thermometer Stuck On The Inside - 05/20/2006
Dear WWM, I just set-up a 55g tank. I put the stick-on thermometer on
the inside of the tank. I had a tank set-up this way when I was a
child, which caused me to not think anything about doing it again.
After I set it up, I noticed that I had made a mistake. Should I remove
it? Will it do any harm? Thanks! Matt < It won't do any harm but
will probably come off after few weeks.-Chuck>
No Heat For Tropical Fish 1/20/06 Please, any
advice would be greatly appreciated. We had a power outage
yesterday or late the day before and my aquarium heater is plugged into
a GFI outlet. Bottom line: when the power went back on the
outlet did not, until I discovered the problem and reset
it. By this time, the water temperature had dropped to fifty
eight degrees. I turned my heater up all the way and grabbed
a spare heater, put it in the tank and did the same. the
temperature is gradually rising and is now about 62. I have a fifty
five gallon tank with three giant Danios, 2 white tetras (I think
that's the name. they are pinkish in color and fan like
fins and tails), a pictus cat, a Pangasius cat, and two large silver
dollars. The giant Danios and tetras were still active
but were not interested in eating. The catfish are hiding
and the silver dollars appear to be in a catatonic
state. What else can I do and are my fish doomed????? <
Put your heater back to its original setting. It will not heat the
water up any faster. When it does reach the temp you want it will
continue to climb and cook your fish so set it back.. Do a 20% water
change with water around 80 F and SLOWLY add it to your tank. Do create
hot and cold spots so that you fish are radically changing temps as
they swim around. Do this every couple of hours. When you get back up
to temp then you may want to increase the aeration and increase the
water temp to 82 to prevent an ich outbreak. Don't try to feed you
fish until the water gets up to the low 70's.-Chuck> Battle
between 2 heated elements 9/25/05 Hi, I Googled this site to
see if you all had already answered my question, without result, and
yet I apologize if you have already answered this. I have a
Betta in a 5 gallon tank. I know I need a 25 watt heater;
I've also read I need one with an automatic shut-off. My
concerns are: my apartment temperature fluctuates from freezing at
night to boiling when the radiator kicks in; so I was hoping to find a
heater that would be able to adjust itself based on the ambient
temperature of the room, in addition to having an automatic shut-off.
<All do... they're thermostatic> The only 25 watt heater
I've been able to find has neither an automatic shut-off, (unless
it's outside of the water... which won't happen), nor does it
indicate that it will vary it's temperature to keep the water at a
relatively consistent temperature. <Won't chill the water, but
will turn itself off beyond the upper limit setting> (It does allow
me to adjust the temperature to one I want). I've found
50 watt heaters that have those qualities; but no 25 watt
heaters. So, I'm wondering if I should get the 25 watt
one anyway, since my tank is only 5 gallons; or if I should get the 50
watt heater that has the automatic shut-off and ability to alter the
amount of heat it generates to keep the water at a consistent
temperature. Do you have any suggestions, or further insights or
suggestions. BubbleMeister and I thank you in advance!
<Mmm, you could use the 50 watt unit... just needs (more) careful
initial setting... Do look into Hydor Products line as well. Bob
Fenner>
Filtration for FW upgraded size system 7/24/05 As always I
come to your site after I do a lot of reading and still can't come
up with a feel for what to do. I have been in the hobby for a couple of
years now, and have gone larger from 10 to 20, to 45, and now I have
gotten a hold of a 150 gallon tank. Still have the smaller tanks set
up. My question is on filtration. So far all I have needed was hang on
filters. My theory has been to buy the next size up from whatever tank
I had. I have never had any problems this way. With a 150 gallon, It
seems I will need multiple filters, so I am in new territory here. My
first thought was (2) emperor 400's, since they are cheap, and a
total of 4 BioWheels should do the trick I feel. I just
don't know if the turnover will be sufficient for SA/CA cichlids
that I keep (GT, JD, Firemouth, Severum, more to be added) I have also
thought of using (1) large canister like the RENA xp3 along with an
emperor 400. This looks like enough filtration, but as with the last
case, is this sufficient turnover? <Along with weekly water
changes...> Should I combine the 2 ideas and use 2 Emperors and the
canister together? <Even better> I'd really appreciate any
insight on heaters as well. I know that as the cichlids get bigger they
like to smash things, so If there is a way to protect them I am all
ears. <Hide these behind rocks, submersibles stuck down along the
gravel line, or in drilled lengths of PVC pipe...> Thanks in
advance, you guys. I will be checking my e-mail like a maniac, awaiting
your answer. <Be chatting, reading. Bob Fenner>
Re: Betta Territoriality (and now temp control) Bob,
<David> Thanks for the advice... got a trio of small platies
yesterday, already seems to have helped slightly reduce
frequency/duration of the Betta's "hunts". This seems to
work much better than having rasboras in there, who are a lot more
jittery than the platies and seemed to only make things worse.
<Good> I also have a question on temperature fluctuations.
It's been getting quite warm here now, getting up to 80+ degrees in
the house in the afternoon. I don't have A/C. With 2 small tanks
(3g and 12g) this is becoming a problem. I have my heaters set to 78.
The 3g tank will get to about 82-84 before the house begins to cool,
the 12g will get to about 81-82. I've started turning off the
lights for a few hours in the afternoon, which obviously isn't
ideal for the plants either. <Agreed... if the vacillation is
no more than 3-5 F. in a day, the low eighties F. are not a problem>
I could set the heater higher to minimize the temp change, but would
then end up with higher peak temp. Looking for the right balance there.
<Well-stated> So, what's the maximum safe daily delta?
<About five degrees Fahrenheit> And what's the hottest a tank
can safely get for, say, 4-5 hours peak? <Mid eighties F.> The
problem will worsen in the summer, when it often gets to 90 in the
house by mid-afternoon. I assume I will have to do some type of DIY
cooling (float ice in bag, etc; uncovering the tank and fan cooling
isn't really an option due to jumping fish and diving cats)...
<Bingo> Regards, Dave <BobF>
Tank not heating Hello, I have a 29 gallon tank that I
purchased as a kit from Petco about three years ago. We set it up and
was working great. We recently moved but took our water and gravel with
us so we wouldn't have to wait for the tank to re-cycle. <Good
idea> We moved from north Texas to central Arkansas. The filter is
the Tetra PF150 with the built in heater (HC100). It worked fine in
Texas. I set the heater at 78 degrees and the temperature was constant.
After moving the heater was still set at 78 degrees but it would only
keep the temp at 72. I bought a second thermometer (since I had broken
the original during the move) but it too said 72. I have tried turning
up the heater but it stays at 72. We had 6 male sailfin mollies, a
female molly, and 2 julii Cory catfish. In the beginning of January the
tank was doing good, with the female molly having babies. About two
weeks later the water temp dropped to 68 degrees. Three of the male
mollies died. I bought a new heater but it was still not getting above
72 degrees. <Strange...> There is a red light that comes on when
the heater is on, but it only comes on for about ten seconds after
plugging it in. Room temperature varies from 70-72 degrees. I have
called the manufacturer and they said I could send the heater in to
verify it is working. (Personally, I believe that two heaters can not
be doing the same exact thing when one is brand new and the other is
three years old.) <IS odd> The house we now live in is about
eighty years old and I thought it might be wiring but I have tried
three different outlets and not luck. Do you have any recommendations?
<I would send both these units into Tetra... a very good company...
I have been to their Blacksburg, VA plant... seen their extensive
testing facilities, HUGE warehouse... some manufacture there. They will
get to the bottom of this I am sure... You have done about what I would
have thus far... and the most likely possibility IS that both heaters
have the same flaw... Likely one of those new-fangled printed circuit
board problems... I wonder on how many units!? Yikes! Bob
Fenner>
Temperature Fluctuations Hello again! I just sent you an
e-mail and I forgot to ask my most pressing question! The temperature
in 44 gallon pentagon tank tends to fluctuate about 3-5 degrees
Fahrenheit from day to night. Is this acceptable? <Mmm, three
degrees is about it... five is too much> It was getting up to 78-79
by nightfall and down to about 73-74 by morning when the lights have
been off and the heat in my house turned down for about 10 hours. I
then turned the dial down a bit and the water currently gets up to
about 76 and down to about 71-72. Which temp. range is preferable?
<Of the two... the lower> I have a 200 watt Whisper submersible
heater that does not a "specific" temperature setting
(meaning it just has an up or down knob not a numerical setting). <I
understand> Does this mean it is less accurate? <Not necessarily,
but there are heaters that do not have this much fluctuation... look to
Eheim's Ebo Jagers...> I have the heater at an angle (not
directly horizontal or vertical) because I read this provides more even
heating. Could this effect its accuracy? <Good question, but no, the
same either orientation> Any help you could provide would be greatly
appreciated. Sincerely, Walt <If this heater is new (less than a
year old) I would take it back to your dealer... and have them exchange
it... The temperature should not vacillate this much. Bob
Fenner>
Heaters rules of thumbs Hi again... here's another
question for you about heaters, is it a rule of thumb that a heater
should be 5 watts for ever gallon of H2O in your tank...i.e.: 55 gallon
tank= a 275 watt heater??? this seems a little extreme to me
but I'm new to this world so I really don't have a clue. < I
have two 100 gallon aquariums in my house and each one has only a 150
watt heater in each. The water is maintained at 78 to 80 degrees year
round with the lows at night reaching maybe 55 degrees. If you want to
set up a tank in your unheated garage in winter then a couple 150 watt
heaters may be needed to keep the fish warm and toasty. Everything is
dependent on what is the coldest air temperature your tank will ever be
expose too? Do you live in a cold climate and then leave your house
unattended with the heater off and let the house get into the 40's
or lower? On the other hand if you lived in a warm weather climate you
may never or hardly ever need a heater.-Chuck> thanks...Mathew
Severe Temperature Drop <Hi, MikeD here> I've just
brought a new tank and after setting it up and introducing my fish I
thought all was well. The next day It seems the heater had been knocked
off and they temperature had been reduced from 26 to 18 degrees<I
don't have a Celsius to Fahrenheit conversion chart handy, but that
looks pretty drastic>. All my fish were looking rather dopey and
sick with the guppies all hanging out at the surface. After turning the
heater back on and removing buckets of cold water and adding warm water
the temperature rose back up. But I was too slow the guppies were
pretty much dead.<Actually, just adjusting the heater and letting it
warm gradually would have been just a little better> The next day
the temp is still 26 but angel fish is upside down, did the temp
fluctuation do this?<Yes. Fish are poikilothermic or cold blooded,
meaning that their body temperature is the same as the as the
surrounding water.> Also I'm missing a long finned leopard Danio
cant find him anywhere? Should I be prepared to lose more or will they
be ok now?<You may well lose more, plus I'd be prepared for an
outbreak of "ick" from the sudden temperature drop. Just
enter the word Ick in the google search and you'll receive a wealth
of information as it's probably the most common problem in the
hobby> I've checked the ph its 6.8 why did the angel die?<The
angelfish had an extra difficulty to deal with besides just the rapid
temperature drop which is already tough enough , that being that
it's a tropical fish that originated in one of the equatorial zones
of the S. American rain forest. Many "jungle" type
animals have systems that can't tolerate cooler temperatures,
particularly cold blooded ones like fish, reptiles and amphibians, with
mere exposure to temperate climes all that's necessary to prove
fatal.>