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Dale Henderson
April 18th 06, 07:36 PM
It's spring in Texas and the temperatures have gone very high. My
aquarium temperature is between 82 and 84 degrees F. I try to keep my
aquarium at 78. In fact, my air conditioner is set at 78. Does anyone
have suggestions as to how to keep the temperature down in my
aquarium. I don't want to boil my fish.

MEAlston
April 18th 06, 07:39 PM
Can you remove the tank cover to allow some heat to evaporate through the
surface?

Koi-Lo
April 18th 06, 07:55 PM
"Dale Henderson" > wrote in message
...
>
> It's spring in Texas and the temperatures have gone very high. My
> aquarium temperature is between 82 and 84 degrees F. I try to keep my
> aquarium at 78. In fact, my air conditioner is set at 78. Does anyone
> have suggestions as to how to keep the temperature down in my
> aquarium. I don't want to boil my fish.
================
I live in TN and it gets hot here also. To help keep the tank temp lower I
raise the 2 reflectors off the surface of the frame to let more air pass
through. I also leave the ceiling fan running which seems to help. If your
fish look distressed you can add more aeration with an airstone or bubble
wall.
--
Koi-Lo....
Frugal ponding since 1995.
Aquariums since 1952.
My Pond & Aquarium Pages:
http://tinyurl.com/9do58
~~~ }<((((o> ~~~ }<{{{{o> ~~~ }<(((((o>

Altum
April 18th 06, 09:29 PM
Dale Henderson wrote:
> It's spring in Texas and the temperatures have gone very high. My
> aquarium temperature is between 82 and 84 degrees F. I try to keep my
> aquarium at 78. In fact, my air conditioner is set at 78. Does anyone
> have suggestions as to how to keep the temperature down in my
> aquarium. I don't want to boil my fish.

Evaporation cools very well. Prop the canopy open or even run a small
fan blowing over the surface of the water. If you air temp is only 78F,
your lights are probably warming the tank. You can raise them higher
above the water surface or install fans in your canopy.

I wouldn't worry too much as long as your fish are showing no signs of
distress. I have similar summer temperatures and my fish do fine as
long as there is plenty of oxygen. I start airstones in all my tanks
when temps get above 80F. If you don't like airstones, you can lower
the water level a bit to get surface splash from your fiter.

--
Put the word aquaria in the subject to reply.
Did you read the FAQ? http://faq.thekrib.com

Mister Gardener
April 18th 06, 10:17 PM
On 18 Apr 2006 13:36:46 -0500, Dale Henderson >
wrote:

>
>It's spring in Texas and the temperatures have gone very high. My
>aquarium temperature is between 82 and 84 degrees F. I try to keep my
>aquarium at 78. In fact, my air conditioner is set at 78. Does anyone
>have suggestions as to how to keep the temperature down in my
>aquarium. I don't want to boil my fish.

It sounds like your problem is with the air conditioner that is
ignoring your settings. Perhaps if you increased the air conditioner
to 70? Add ceiling fan to move cooled air to your aquarium? Buy
another air conditioner? At the aquarium end you can keep the lights
off during the really hot times, remove cover glass or hood if you
don't have a tank of high jumpers. Increase water movement with an
additional power head which will increase evaporation and improve
oxygenation in the water. Move to Maine. And bring lots of warm
clothes.

-- Mister Gardener

Dale Henderson
April 19th 06, 01:28 AM
>>>>> "Altum" == Altum > writes:

Altum> I wouldn't worry too much as long as your fish are showing no
Altum> signs of distress. I have similar summer temperatures and my
Altum> fish do fine as long as there is plenty of oxygen. I start
Altum> airstones in all my tanks when temps get above 80F. If you
Altum> don't like airstones, you can lower the water level a bit to
Altum> get surface splash from your fiter.

My fish are acting a little hyper but other than that seem fine. One
of my gourami's seems to be spending a lot of time at the surface, but
I think that might not so abnormal for a labyrinth fish.

I'm a bit paranoid about airation, so I keep a bubble wall going all
the time. As for lowering the water level, the water does that fairly
well on its own. I think I've lost about 1 gallon since Saturday.

Altum
April 19th 06, 02:53 AM
Dale Henderson wrote:

> My fish are acting a little hyper but other than that seem fine. One
> of my gourami's seems to be spending a lot of time at the surface, but
> I think that might not so abnormal for a labyrinth fish.
>
> I'm a bit paranoid about airation, so I keep a bubble wall going all
> the time. As for lowering the water level, the water does that fairly
> well on its own. I think I've lost about 1 gallon since Saturday.

Gouramis tend to hang out at the surface and they'll be one of the last
fish to suffer from oxygen problems. Hyper is not generally a sign of
oxygen shortage, except in some catfish. Cories and plecos sometimes
dart to the surface for a gulp of air (they absorb oxygen from it) when
oxygen levels start to fall.

My fish act "hyper" if there's a trace of ammonia or chloramine after a
water change. It's escape behavior in that case.

--
Put the word aquaria in the subject to email me.
Did you read the FAQ? http://faq.thekrib.com

Koi-Lo
April 19th 06, 06:50 AM
"MEAlston" > wrote in message
...
> Can you remove the tank cover to allow some heat to evaporate through the
> surface?
==================
Only if you have non-jumpers. You may try using a screen cut to size to
keep jumpers in.
--
Koi-Lo....
Frugal ponding since 1995.
Aquariums since 1952.
My Pond & Aquarium Pages:
http://tinyurl.com/9do58
~~~ }<((((o> ~~~ }<{{{{o> ~~~ }<(((((o>

MEAlston
April 19th 06, 05:26 PM
Ya' know..water is the quality of life. Ah, Man..I need a coffee break.
If you think you don't want to drink the water, fix it so you can. The fish
will thank you for it.

fish lover
April 19th 06, 11:42 PM
If you still have a heater in it, unplug it would be my fist action.

Other than that, everyone's suggestions are fine.

There are chillers for SW tank. I'm not sure if you want to go that
way. If it is really hot and your room temp is 78, you can buy a cheap
desk top fan($10) and aim it at the tank. Tunr it on and the glass
does a fine job letting the heat out.

>
>It's spring in Texas and the temperatures have gone very high. My
>aquarium temperature is between 82 and 84 degrees F. I try to keep my
>aquarium at 78. In fact, my air conditioner is set at 78. Does anyone
>have suggestions as to how to keep the temperature down in my
>aquarium. I don't want to boil my fish.

Frank
April 20th 06, 12:06 AM
Dale Henderson wrote,
>My fish are acting a little hyper but other than that seem fine...

Might want to check your nitrAte levels. Stereotyped behavior,
repetitive excape movements, repeatedly bumping glass - back and forth
movements, up and down cornors are all symptoms of high nitrAte levels.
If the nitrAte levels are high - also the DOC levels (high organics)
would be high - organic matter comsumes a lot of oxygen.
.........................Frank

Frank
April 20th 06, 08:30 AM
fish lover wrote,
>There are chillers ......

A cheap under the bar refrigerator, a couple of holes in it, a coil of
hose and a canister filter works great, is a *lot* cheaper than a SW
chiller, and will also cool down a few beers............... Frank

MEAlston
April 20th 06, 04:43 PM
Now that's a common sense approach...pure and simple...no mess, no fuss.
My Hat's off to ya!

Roy
April 21st 06, 12:41 AM
I don;t know why freshwater fish keepers do not do like sal****er fish
keepers do.....add a simple muffin type fan to their hoods......Doies
a wonderfulll job of keeping tanks much cooler.

On 18 Apr 2006 19:28:59 -0500, Dale Henderson >
wrote:
>><>>>>>> "Altum" == Altum > writes:
>><>
>><>Altum> I wouldn't worry too much as long as your fish are showing no
>><>Altum> signs of distress. I have similar summer temperatures and my
>><>Altum> fish do fine as long as there is plenty of oxygen. I start
>><>Altum> airstones in all my tanks when temps get above 80F. If you
>><>Altum> don't like airstones, you can lower the water level a bit to
>><>Altum> get surface splash from your fiter.
>><>
>><>My fish are acting a little hyper but other than that seem fine. One
>><>of my gourami's seems to be spending a lot of time at the surface, but
>><>I think that might not so abnormal for a labyrinth fish.
>><>
>><>I'm a bit paranoid about airation, so I keep a bubble wall going all
>><>the time. As for lowering the water level, the water does that fairly
>><>well on its own. I think I've lost about 1 gallon since Saturday.
>><>

--
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The original frugal ponder ! Koi-ahoi mates....

MEAlston
April 21st 06, 01:59 AM
I'm lost on the muffin fan. Can you show me an online source for this item?
Thanks for the help...ED

Charles
April 21st 06, 02:06 AM
On Fri, 21 Apr 2006 00:59:33 GMT, "MEAlston"
> wrote:

>I'm lost on the muffin fan. Can you show me an online source for this item?
>Thanks for the help...ED
>


Here's a surplus site that sells such things:

http://www.mpja.com/

MEAlston
April 21st 06, 02:15 AM
Oh..OK...It's just like the chassis fan in my 'puter. Thanks again.

Charles
April 21st 06, 02:18 AM
On Fri, 21 Apr 2006 01:15:02 GMT, "MEAlston"
> wrote:

>Oh..OK...It's just like the chassis fan in my 'puter. Thanks again.
>


The same. You could get one for 120 VAC, or low voltage depending on
how comfortable you are around electricity.

Roy
April 21st 06, 02:20 AM
Its a typical 2 VDC fan as used by computewrs, that is cut into the
aquiarium hood and blows across the light bulbs and water surface
creating some evaporation which in turn cools down the tank a few
degrees.

If youy use a variable voltage wall wart type transformer (less than
$12.00 in Wally World) you can vary the volts going to the fan which
in turn varies the speed of the fan and the amount of cooling air. YOu
can bump a heater up against a fan that is adjusted properly and
ma8ntain a pretty darn good close proximity of temperature
control......I can maintain my sal****er tanks within 2 deg or less by
persisitent tuning of heater on and cooling fan speeds........Of
course room ambient temp means a lot as well, but once you get the
hang of it its easy to do. I also made a submersible thermistor that
senses water temp and when water gets to a set point it turns on a
fan.......yet another method, but looks promising. They sell a fan
that uses air temp but its too inaccurate as air is not the medium the
fish are in.....
http://surpluscenter.com/item.asp?UID=2006042020150648&item=16-1317&catname=

YOu can get these type fans in all sizes, which 1.6" and 3" sizes are
most commonly used for aquarium cooling. Those sizes are also common
on computers............stay with 12VDC so there is no high AC voltage
for best saftey, and make the air blow in from the outside and across
water.


On Fri, 21 Apr 2006 00:59:33 GMT, "MEAlston"
> wrote:
>><>I'm lost on the muffin fan. Can you show me an online source for this item?
>><>Thanks for the help...ED
>><>

--
\\\|///
( @ @ )
-----------oOOo(_)oOOo---------------


oooO
---------( )----Oooo----------------
\ ( ( )
\_) ) /
(_/
The original frugal ponder ! Koi-ahoi mates....