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New reef tank doing great - Nano struggling in the heat
Well I always thought that the level of T8s in the tank would be a
problem and I'm certainly being proved right.....the corals are very unhappy - the blue legged hermits, clown fish, urchins, snails do not seem to care in the slightest.... So.....I'm working on equalising the water between my new 350L tank and the nano....mainly by using the water from the big tank for water changes on the small.....in this way I am anticipating that moving the corals across will be very easy and acclimitization at a minimum..... But I don't want to tear down the little nano tank completely (15 gall) - so I am wondering if the blue leg hermits and the Clown fish will cope with the higher temps - it is pretty obvious that the corals can't.....moving the fish is certainly an option but the blue legs probably not as I have been told they would kill my red legs.... Any ideas or thoughts would be appreciated TIA Gill |
New reef tank doing great - Nano struggling in the heat
Well look it here the person responsible for all the crap in the
aquaria groups, through her hate group geared at turmoil and trolls, is asking such a bunch as this whom she behind the scenes used to ridicule for them being assinine dumbasses, but now she needs their ****nig help. How quaint! Maybe folks need to re read the hate group and a few of your emails about Wayne and Pszemol and Kurt in this group! Remember too folks, that she slipped in there and started to delete her posts trying to cover up her ways.....but there is still more than enough reading to make yu leary of dealing with this person. Just key in n the quoted texts or replies, her statements are still there, even though her original statment was deleted by her......To bad she did not think enough of her friend to give them any warning or time to do what she did.........Hate mongors and grup agitaotrs is what they were in a hidden behind the scenes events. All because she did not like Carol Gulley aka Reel Mckoi and her upper hand on the aquaria groups was slipping daily......NOw its all but gone! hahahahahaaha http://groups.google.co.uk/group/rec...hgroups/topics On Mon, 11 Jun 2007 23:39:08 +0100, Gill Passman wrote: Well I always thought that the level of T8s in the tank would be a problem and I'm certainly being proved right.....the corals are very unhappy - the blue legged hermits, clown fish, urchins, snails do not seem to care in the slightest.... So.....I'm working on equalising the water between my new 350L tank and the nano....mainly by using the water from the big tank for water changes on the small.....in this way I am anticipating that moving the corals across will be very easy and acclimitization at a minimum..... But I don't want to tear down the little nano tank completely (15 gall) - so I am wondering if the blue leg hermits and the Clown fish will cope with the higher temps - it is pretty obvious that the corals can't.....moving the fish is certainly an option but the blue legs probably not as I have been told they would kill my red legs.... Any ideas or thoughts would be appreciated TIA Gill ------- I forgot more about ponds and koi than I'll ever know! |
New reef tank doing great - Nano struggling in the heat
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New reef tank doing great - Nano struggling in the heat
Gill Passman wrote:
Yes, I thought about doing that but I also have a big tank in an air conditioned room that I can put the corals into........my question would be how temperture tolerant would the clown fish be if I don't move them - it is still an option as the new tank only has 6 green chromis at the moment..... What kind of temps? The problem is that oxygen saturation levels drop as temps go up. I've been touching 83 in my display tank lately, and have lowered my AC a degree to counter it. --Kurt |
New reef tank doing great - Nano struggling in the heat
KurtG wrote:
What kind of temps? The problem is that oxygen saturation levels drop as temps go up. I've been touching 83 in my display tank lately, and have lowered my AC a degree to counter it. --Kurt The ambient temperature is 72F at the moment (quite low for the time of year). The Nano is up to 88F. The new tank is 80F before I switched on the AC. There is no AC in the room where the nano is. My thinking is that if I move the corals out into the big tank then I can keep the nano as a FOWLR and reduce the lighting accordingly. The fish do not appear to be showing any signs of distress - just the corals. Gill |
New reef tank doing great - Nano struggling in the heat
Gill Passman wrote:
The Nano is up to 88F. That's too hot. I think 85-86 would be the extreme upper end. They can handle 90, but any short power failure would suffocate them. Can you position the nano close to the big tank and have them use the same sump? There are also reasonable chillers for nanos: http://www.marinedepot.com/ps/ps_Vie...ct~CW1111.html --Kurt |
New reef tank doing great - Nano struggling in the heat
KurtG wrote:
Gill Passman wrote: The Nano is up to 88F. That's too hot. I think 85-86 would be the extreme upper end. They can handle 90, but any short power failure would suffocate them. Can you position the nano close to the big tank and have them use the same sump? There are also reasonable chillers for nanos: http://www.marinedepot.com/ps/ps_Vie...ct~CW1111.html --Kurt Managed to get it down to 86F by turning off one of the lights and leaving part of the top open. I'm not happy with the level of lighting for the corals (2 T8 tubes giving just 30Watts - tank is 15 gall) so I think I'm going to start moving the corals. Unfortunately I can't move the nano. Stock is some mushroom rock, button polyps (v. unhappy), some star polyps, a capnella and a frilly mushroom colony. One of my urchins appears to have gone awol but could be round the back of the rock. Took a look at the chiller - looks good but sadly hasn't made it across here yet. I will certainly look around to see if I can find anything similar for future use. Thanks Gill |
New reef tank doing great - Nano struggling in the heat
powered by a separate 12 volt D.C. power supply and draws less than 50 watts. That should be easy enough to work out. Most power supplies I buy these days will take either 120/220. If you want a controller, it looks like you need this: http://www.marinedepot.com/md_viewIt...product=CW1113 Contact me off list and I'll ship if across the pond for you. Given how low the dollar has gotten, it should cost you about a quid. --Kurt Gill Passman wrote: KurtG wrote: Gill Passman wrote: The Nano is up to 88F. That's too hot. I think 85-86 would be the extreme upper end. They can handle 90, but any short power failure would suffocate them. Can you position the nano close to the big tank and have them use the same sump? There are also reasonable chillers for nanos: http://www.marinedepot.com/ps/ps_Vie...ct~CW1111.html --Kurt Managed to get it down to 86F by turning off one of the lights and leaving part of the top open. I'm not happy with the level of lighting for the corals (2 T8 tubes giving just 30Watts - tank is 15 gall) so I think I'm going to start moving the corals. Unfortunately I can't move the nano. Stock is some mushroom rock, button polyps (v. unhappy), some star polyps, a capnella and a frilly mushroom colony. One of my urchins appears to have gone awol but could be round the back of the rock. Took a look at the chiller - looks good but sadly hasn't made it across here yet. I will certainly look around to see if I can find anything similar for future use. Thanks Gill |
New reef tank doing great - Nano struggling in the heat
KurtG wrote:
powered by a separate 12 volt D.C. power supply and draws less than 50 watts. That should be easy enough to work out. Most power supplies I buy these days will take either 120/220. If you want a controller, it looks like you need this: http://www.marinedepot.com/md_viewIt...product=CW1113 Contact me off list and I'll ship if across the pond for you. Given how low the dollar has gotten, it should cost you about a quid. --Kurt Thanks for the offer....generally ordering from the US isn't a problem for kit apart from the power issue but hubby is sharp on that sort of thing. I'll see what is available locally first though. Temp is now down to 84F. I've moved the capnella and one of the star polyp colonies over to the other tank. The capnella is looking a bit better but still bent in the middle but I'm sure it will recover. The stars aren't out yet so I'll give them a bit more time. I couldn't get the other star colony out of the tank as the female clownfish decided it needed to be protected and kept biting me whenever I went near it. The mushrooms and xenia seem fine for now. I've located the other urchin and it seems OK. I'll stick to just the two tubes again tomorrow and see how things go. Gill |
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