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#1
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I have a new tank in my living room. I had 6 red serpae in it. They have now
passed on due to the changes in temperature I've found. If I leave the AC on constantly the temp will go down to 74-76 degrees. The problem is that the natural temp for the room is about 84-86. What can I do, short of a chiller of some type, to regulate the Temp to something in the tropical fish range and not get hit with another case of Ich. |
#2
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Psinapse wrote:
I have a new tank in my living room. I had 6 red serpae in it. They have now passed on due to the changes in temperature I've found. If I leave the AC on constantly the temp will go down to 74-76 degrees. The problem is that the natural temp for the room is about 84-86. What can I do, short of a chiller of some type, to regulate the Temp to something in the tropical fish range and not get hit with another case of Ich. This was so, so me a few months ago when the temps started rising here. I got a lot of good suggestions from this ng. The ones I adopted were leaving the tank lids open and doing more frequent water changes. Adding air bricks - oxygen is depleted when the temp of the water rises - if it is a heavily planted tank this is more of an issue at night time (most of my deaths occured first thing in the morning). Trying to shade the rooms as much as possible and ventilate them adequately. I got some suggestions of very clever ideas of adding computer fans into the hoods - it didn't get quite bad enough but I am certainly considering it for next sumer. Another thing is to keep the lights on for a minimum period of time....the height of our summer the lights came on for feeding in the morning and briefly in the evening for watching the fish - wreaked havoc with the plants but kept the temps low enough for the fish. Hope some of this helps Gill |
#3
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![]() "Gill Passman" wrote in message .. . Psinapse wrote: I have a new tank in my living room. I had 6 red serpae in it. They have now passed on due to the changes in temperature I've found. If I leave the AC on constantly the temp will go down to 74-76 degrees. The problem is that the natural temp for the room is about 84-86. What can I do, short of a chiller of some type, to regulate the Temp to something in the tropical fish range and not get hit with another case of Ich. This was so, so me a few months ago when the temps started rising here. I got a lot of good suggestions from this ng. The ones I adopted were leaving the tank lids open and doing more frequent water changes. Adding air bricks - oxygen is depleted when the temp of the water rises - if it is a heavily planted tank this is more of an issue at night time (most of my deaths occured first thing in the morning). Trying to shade the rooms as much as possible and ventilate them adequately. I got some suggestions of very clever ideas of adding computer fans into the hoods - it didn't get quite bad enough but I am certainly considering it for next sumer. Another thing is to keep the lights on for a minimum period of time....the height of our summer the lights came on for feeding in the morning and briefly in the evening for watching the fish - wreaked havoc with the plants but kept the temps low enough for the fish. Hope some of this helps Gill Thanks I'm thinking about just waiting until summer cools off a little more then trying again. At least if its cold I can warm up the tank. |
#4
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Gill Passman wrote:
Psinapse wrote: I have a new tank in my living room. I had 6 red serpae in it. They have now passed on due to the changes in temperature I've found. If I leave the AC on constantly the temp will go down to 74-76 degrees. The problem is that the natural temp for the room is about 84-86. What can I do, short of a chiller of some type, to regulate the Temp to something in the tropical fish range and not get hit with another case of Ich. This was so, so me a few months ago when the temps started rising here. I got a lot of good suggestions from this ng. The ones I adopted were leaving the tank lids open and doing more frequent water changes. Adding air bricks - oxygen is depleted when the temp of the water rises - if it is a heavily planted tank this is more of an issue at night time (most of my deaths occured first thing in the morning). Trying to shade the rooms as much as possible and ventilate them adequately. I got some suggestions of very clever ideas of adding computer fans into the hoods - it didn't get quite bad enough but I am certainly considering it for next sumer. Another thing is to keep the lights on for a minimum period of time....the height of our summer the lights came on for feeding in the morning and briefly in the evening for watching the fish - wreaked havoc with the plants but kept the temps low enough for the fish. Hope some of this helps Gill First, ich usually dies at temps of 85F, and it's usually easier to kill in warmer water even if you have the misfortune to have a temperature tolerant strain. Second, most tropical fish we keep are just fine at temps of 84-86F for a few months so don't worry too much. Amazon basin fish in particular handle warmer temps well. Mollies do too. I don't have A/C either and I've got bettas, guppies, cardinal tetras, a pygmy chained loach, harlequin rasboras, SAE, Otocinclus, and a discus all at daytime temps of up to 85F. Outdoors where temps have been rising to 90F during the day and falling to 75F at night, I have Endler's livebearers, mollies, a dojo loach, white clouds, goldfish, and koi. The outdoor fish are thriving and I have seen no signs of any diseases. (knock wood) Plants ARE a bit more difficult to grow at 85F, but the tough standbys like java fern, anubias, hygrophila, and swords do fine. If you're concerned about temperature swings, set your heaters to a few degrees below daytime temps (82F maybe). Like Gill, I use an airstone and prop the tank lids open to allow water to evaporate and hold tank temps to 85F or so during the day. Finally, feed well and change lots of water to compensate for the fast metabolism of fish at warmer temps. -- Elaine T __ http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__ rec.aquaria.* FAQ http://faq.thekrib.com |
#5
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Bottom posted.
"Psinapse" wrote in message ... I have a new tank in my living room. I had 6 red serpae in it. They have now passed on due to the changes in temperature I've found. If I leave the AC on constantly the temp will go down to 74-76 degrees. The problem is that the natural temp for the room is about 84-86. What can I do, short of a chiller of some type, to regulate the Temp to something in the tropical fish range and not get hit with another case of Ich. Guppies (fancy or otherwise), bettas, and I think white cloud mountain minnows can take those temperatures pretty easily. Those 3 types of fish are at the very least some of what you can find that will work. Good luck and later! |
#6
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Daniel Morrow wrote:
Bottom posted. "Psinapse" wrote in message ... I have a new tank in my living room. I had 6 red serpae in it. They have now passed on due to the changes in temperature I've found. If I leave the AC on constantly the temp will go down to 74-76 degrees. The problem is that the natural temp for the room is about 84-86. What can I do, short of a chiller of some type, to regulate the Temp to something in the tropical fish range and not get hit with another case of Ich. Guppies (fancy or otherwise), bettas, and I think white cloud mountain minnows can take those temperatures pretty easily. Those 3 types of fish are at the very least some of what you can find that will work. Good luck and later! It was the Mollies and Rosy Barbs I found couldn't cope with the heat...but we did have the additional problem of a stuck heater...but even after that was rectified we still lost fish.... My Community Tank in the Conservatory with the remedial steps I described coped very well at the time in question was:- Gouramis Neon Tetras Queen Arabesque Plec Clown Loaches Guppies Flying Foxes Otos Platys My betta (and his platy companion) in his small 5 gall is still suffering high temps but coping OK - he's not building bubble nests but still says "hello" to me every time I go near the tank. Gill |
#7
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Thanks for all the feedback.
"Gill Passman" wrote in message .. . Daniel Morrow wrote: Bottom posted. "Psinapse" wrote in message ... I have a new tank in my living room. I had 6 red serpae in it. They have now passed on due to the changes in temperature I've found. If I leave the AC on constantly the temp will go down to 74-76 degrees. The problem is that the natural temp for the room is about 84-86. What can I do, short of a chiller of some type, to regulate the Temp to something in the tropical fish range and not get hit with another case of Ich. Guppies (fancy or otherwise), bettas, and I think white cloud mountain minnows can take those temperatures pretty easily. Those 3 types of fish are at the very least some of what you can find that will work. Good luck and later! It was the Mollies and Rosy Barbs I found couldn't cope with the heat...but we did have the additional problem of a stuck heater...but even after that was rectified we still lost fish.... My Community Tank in the Conservatory with the remedial steps I described coped very well at the time in question was:- Gouramis Neon Tetras Queen Arabesque Plec Clown Loaches Guppies Flying Foxes Otos Platys My betta (and his platy companion) in his small 5 gall is still suffering high temps but coping OK - he's not building bubble nests but still says "hello" to me every time I go near the tank. Gill |
#8
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On Mon, 19 Sep 2005 12:25:27 -0400, "Psinapse"
wrote: I have a new tank in my living room. I had 6 red serpae in it. They have now passed on due to the changes in temperature I've found. If I leave the AC on constantly the temp will go down to 74-76 degrees. The problem is that the natural temp for the room is about 84-86. What can I do, short of a chiller of some type, to regulate the Temp to something in the tropical fish range and not get hit with another case of Ich. AllI have read I agree with, I have a similiar situation, only the tank is in my Son's room, on the third floor of the town house, and we really can't get the room temp low enough to lower the tank temp. Bad placement on our part, that corner of the house gets full sun, all day long. I bought a Spiderman "mini-fridge" on Amazon ($20). Holds just a little over a six pack. I had an old hang on the back power filter, self contained, little pump, flat filter pack... I took the fridge apart, discovered that it is a peltier coolr with a large heat sink and fan, same thing used to over clock computers. I then attached it to the back of the filter, this was a major pain, I had to put holes in the front, and the back so I could screw it back together. Long story short, after letting the silicon gel dry, I am waiting for it to cure. Test runs in a 5 gallon bucket dropped the temperatore about 15degrees F. in about 2 hours. If you have the time, and inclination, this might be a fun project for you. --Tony |
#9
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![]() AllI have read I agree with, I have a similiar situation, only the tank is in my Son's room, on the third floor of the town house, and we really can't get the room temp low enough to lower the tank temp. Bad placement on our part, that corner of the house gets full sun, all day long. I bought a Spiderman "mini-fridge" on Amazon ($20). Holds just a little over a six pack. I had an old hang on the back power filter, self contained, little pump, flat filter pack... I took the fridge apart, discovered that it is a peltier coolr with a large heat sink and fan, same thing used to over clock computers. I then attached it to the back of the filter, this was a major pain, I had to put holes in the front, and the back so I could screw it back together. Long story short, after letting the silicon gel dry, I am waiting for it to cure. Test runs in a 5 gallon bucket dropped the temperatore about 15degrees F. in about 2 hours. If you have the time, and inclination, this might be a fun project for you. I have a similar project on my list of things to do, involving a small freezer off ebay, drill two holes through the top, coil tubing inside the freezer, pack freezer full of stuff, ice cube bags possibly, attach a pump to a thermic switch, and off you go, pump the water through the freezer to cool it down. Not very energy efficient but still more so than the chiller units you can buy for aquariums, and a damn sight cheaper. So long as the wife can handle a beer cooler in the living room Cheers A |
#10
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![]() "Ali Day" wrote in message ... If you have the time, and inclination, this might be a fun project for you. I have a similar project on my list of things to do, involving a small freezer off ebay, drill two holes through the top, coil tubing inside the freezer, pack freezer full of stuff, ice cube bags possibly, attach a pump to a thermic switch, and off you go, pump the water through the freezer to cool it down. Not very energy efficient but still more so than the chiller units you can buy for aquariums, and a damn sight cheaper. So long as the wife can handle a beer cooler in the living room .... Drill a third hole to fit a tap in it, then? (I can hear the arguments now, "honest honey, its for the health of the fish... they _need_ it." :-) DZ AW |
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