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Water Changes
I havent been into the hobby for a while and I'm considering getting another
tank and have some questions, but water changes would be the biggest problem with our small apartment at the moment... Are there any guidelines by how much (50%, 100%?) of the tanks water you change out, how often, any other tips and or suggestions! |
Water Changes
"HyperCube33" wrote in
: I havent been into the hobby for a while and I'm considering getting another tank and have some questions, but water changes would be the biggest problem with our small apartment at the moment... Are there any guidelines by how much (50%, 100%?) of the tanks water you change out, how often, any other tips and or suggestions! Unless you are trying to maintain certain more demanding species (discus, etc.) the most often used rule of thumb I've seen is 20% water changes, made weekly (for freshwater tanks). Other tip: If you are getting back into the hobby, re-learn everything you can about cycling a tank. Netmax's Aquarium website helped me the most when I got into the hobby (I like the way its laid out) http://www.netmax.tk/ I've killfiled most of the trollers who plagued this forum in months past, but if they become a problem for you, most of the previous posters here migrated to a moderated forum, called "The Freshwater Aquarium"; http://groups.google.com/group/The-F...nk=gschg&hl=en Regards DaveZ Atom Weaver |
Water Changes
"atomweaver" wrote in message
... "HyperCube33" wrote in : I havent been into the hobby for a while and I'm considering getting another tank and have some questions, but water changes would be the biggest problem with our small apartment at the moment... Are there any guidelines by how much (50%, 100%?) of the tanks water you change out, how often, any other tips and or suggestions! Unless you are trying to maintain certain more demanding species (discus, etc.) the most often used rule of thumb I've seen is 20% water changes, made weekly (for freshwater tanks). Other tip: If you are getting back into the hobby, re-learn everything you can about cycling a tank. Netmax's Aquarium website helped me the most when I got into the hobby (I like the way its laid out) http://www.netmax.tk/ I've killfiled most of the trollers who plagued this forum in months past, but if they become a problem for you, most of the previous posters here migrated to a moderated forum, called "The Freshwater Aquarium"; http://groups.google.com/group/The-F...nk=gschg&hl=en Regards DaveZ Atom Weaver No kidding. I learned why one species of our fish died/got sick and didnt breed now, woops! |
Water Changes
On Wed, 6 Sep 2006 08:10:27 -0500, "HyperCube33"
wrote: I havent been into the hobby for a while and I'm considering getting another tank and have some questions, but water changes would be the biggest problem with our small apartment at the moment... Are there any guidelines by how much (50%, 100%?) of the tanks water you change out, how often, any other tips and or suggestions! I have 5 tanks varying from 10 to 75 gallon. I change 20% twice weekly, I neglect filter cleaning in favor of water changes. I use a Python siphon on the 29 and 75 gallon tanks. I am fortunate that I can use the community water with no treatment, I run straight from the kitchen faucet. I use a siphon and bucket for the 3 ten gallon tanks. I have followed this routine for over 3 years and quite satisfied. I keep maintenance routines simple as I am more likely to reliably follow them if they are simple. I am a hazard with chemicals and have killed fish once, so really am pleased that my community water content allows direct substitution. dick |
Water Changes
On Wed, 06 Sep 2006 13:25:44 GMT, atomweaver
wrote: "HyperCube33" wrote in : I havent been into the hobby for a while and I'm considering getting another tank and have some questions, but water changes would be the biggest problem with our small apartment at the moment... Are there any guidelines by how much (50%, 100%?) of the tanks water you change out, how often, any other tips and or suggestions! Unless you are trying to maintain certain more demanding species (discus, etc.) the most often used rule of thumb I've seen is 20% water changes, made weekly (for freshwater tanks). Other tip: If you are getting back into the hobby, re-learn everything you can about cycling a tank. Netmax's Aquarium website helped me the most when I got into the hobby (I like the way its laid out) http://www.netmax.tk/ I've killfiled most of the trollers who plagued this forum in months past, but if they become a problem for you, most of the previous posters here migrated to a moderated forum, called "The Freshwater Aquarium"; http://groups.google.com/group/The-F...nk=gschg&hl=en Regards DaveZ Atom Weaver Good news! The trollers have been gone for a month or 2. Two posters are currently having a squabble with each other, but none of the attack everyone and impersonate everyone stuff. I would clear the killfile as some of the names were acquired from regular posters. If needed you can start filtering again. dick |
Water Changes
What the hell 'Dick'?
Flame on. |
Water Changes
"Dick" wrote in message ... On Wed, 6 Sep 2006 08:10:27 -0500, "HyperCube33" wrote: I havent been into the hobby for a while and I'm considering getting another tank and have some questions, but water changes would be the biggest problem with our small apartment at the moment... Are there any guidelines by how much (50%, 100%?) of the tanks water you change out, how often, any other tips and or suggestions! I have 5 tanks varying from 10 to 75 gallon. I change 20% twice weekly, I neglect filter cleaning in favor of water changes. I use a Python siphon on the 29 and 75 gallon tanks. I am fortunate that I can use the community water with no treatment, I run straight from the kitchen faucet. I use a siphon and bucket for the 3 ten gallon tanks. I have followed this routine for over 3 years and quite satisfied. I keep maintenance routines simple as I am more likely to reliably follow them if they are simple. I am a hazard with chemicals and have killed fish once, so really am pleased that my community water content allows direct substitution. dick So you run strait from the tap, into a bucket and then dump it into your tank without "gassing?" |
Prompting a change
What conditions prompt a water change? What test kit results (high nitrates,
etc) would be an indication for a partial water change? Debris buildup...blah blah. Any favorite tools used to change the water? |
Prompting a change
HyperCube33 wrote: What conditions prompt a water change? What test kit results (high nitrates, etc) would be an indication for a partial water change? Debris buildup...blah blah. Any favorite tools used to change the water? Hyper.... The conditions that prompt a water change a Being that it's a tank and not open water which is constantly refreshed naturally. Ammonia readings...if it's not zero, water changes are needed. (new tank syndrome, etc.) High nitrite readings. (new tank syndrome). High nitrate readings. (old tank syndrome). Over feeding. Before or after medicating. New fish added (after quarantine period). Probably some I have forgotten too, hehe. Now you asked about what test kit results would indicate a water change. That of course would depend on the individual kit, as they are different and have different numbers. It would make it so much easier if there was one standerd test for each, but there a several brands and even different types from the same manufactor. So that was a bit of a loaded question and one that cannot be answered without a specific test kit in mind. |
Water Changes
On Wed, 6 Sep 2006 17:48:24 -0500, "HyperCube33"
wrote: "Dick" wrote in message .. . On Wed, 6 Sep 2006 08:10:27 -0500, "HyperCube33" wrote: I havent been into the hobby for a while and I'm considering getting another tank and have some questions, but water changes would be the biggest problem with our small apartment at the moment... Are there any guidelines by how much (50%, 100%?) of the tanks water you change out, how often, any other tips and or suggestions! I have 5 tanks varying from 10 to 75 gallon. I change 20% twice weekly, I neglect filter cleaning in favor of water changes. I use a Python siphon on the 29 and 75 gallon tanks. I am fortunate that I can use the community water with no treatment, I run straight from the kitchen faucet. I use a siphon and bucket for the 3 ten gallon tanks. I have followed this routine for over 3 years and quite satisfied. I keep maintenance routines simple as I am more likely to reliably follow them if they are simple. I am a hazard with chemicals and have killed fish once, so really am pleased that my community water content allows direct substitution. dick So you run strait from the tap, into a bucket and then dump it into your tank without "gassing?" Yep, been doing it for over 3 years. Not only do I reduce hazards due to my clumsiness, I can easily move fish from one tank to another if need be. A year or so ago I decided to separate the boys from the girls among my live bearers. I was more worried about those I didn't move. The stress was quite noticeable among those left in the original tanks. One small male in the 75 I couldn't catch, so moved several females instead. He stayed in hiding for about a week. I hope the caveat was plain enough, do check your local water content before trying this. dick |
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