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water change advice



 
 
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  #11  
Old July 5th 06, 12:28 AM posted to rec.aquaria.marine.reefs
Bryan
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 13
Default water change advice

so Wayne, tell me about this overflow. Does the aquarium water go thru the
overflow hose to the sump then you have a pump in the sump that you can
switch between bathtub and aquarium? That' sounds like an smooth and
non-messy setup. I don't have a tub near nor a basement but I might be able
to stick a hose out the window and water the yard for a minute. ha

B


"Wayne Sallee" wrote in message
...
exotec wrote on 7/3/2006 1:43 AM:
And we never add anything directly to the tank. For small volumes
(supplements, etc) we pour into the overflows; for larger volumes, we
pour or pump into the sump. I live in fear of dire warnings from
publications and LFS "experts" (?) about shocking the tank with
too-quick changes, so we try to make sure whatever goes into the
system hits the tank last.


When I do a water change on my 120 gallon tank, I add water that is
slightly saltier (heavier). I make a 50% water change. I use pumps and
hoses. The new water is pumped in with a hose that goes to the botom of
the tank, and a sock on the end of the hose. That way the new water stays
at the bottom of the tank (100% water change and fish, and corals don't
mind). The old water goes down the overflow. The one and only pump on the
system that pumps the water from the sump to the tank, is swiched with
valves to pumping water from the sump to the bath tub, and down the drain.
So I do a 50% water change on the tank, and the water in the tank never
drops. During the process, the fish and corals at the bottom half (realy
about 2/3 of the tank) experience a short term 100% water change, and are
not bothered by it.

Wayne Sallee
Wayne's Pets



  #12  
Old July 6th 06, 03:42 PM posted to rec.aquaria.marine.reefs
Wayne Sallee
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,181
Default water change advice

Yea it's just a standard built in overflow. Even a hang on
overflow would work. Anyone with a sump can do it. I have
a short vinal hose that I hooked up to the niple on the
plumbing, and to do the water change I hook up a longer
vinal hose to the short hose, and send that to the
bathroom. Yes you can just send it out the window. That's
what I do when I clean out my lime water barrel. The salt
will tend to kill the grass back a bit, but then that's
just less weed eating around the house :-)

See plumbing pictures at C:\Documents and Settings\Wayne
Sallee\My Stuff\My Web
Page\waynesallee.com\plumbingpictures.htm

It's the first picture, the one that goes to the bathtub
is the valve that is in the front middle of the picture.

Wayne Sallee
Wayne's Pets



Bryan wrote on 7/4/2006 7:28 PM:
so Wayne, tell me about this overflow. Does the aquarium water go thru the
overflow hose to the sump then you have a pump in the sump that you can
switch between bathtub and aquarium? That' sounds like an smooth and
non-messy setup. I don't have a tub near nor a basement but I might be able
to stick a hose out the window and water the yard for a minute. ha

B


"Wayne Sallee" wrote in message
...
exotec wrote on 7/3/2006 1:43 AM:
And we never add anything directly to the tank. For small volumes
(supplements, etc) we pour into the overflows; for larger volumes, we
pour or pump into the sump. I live in fear of dire warnings from
publications and LFS "experts" (?) about shocking the tank with
too-quick changes, so we try to make sure whatever goes into the
system hits the tank last.

When I do a water change on my 120 gallon tank, I add water that is
slightly saltier (heavier). I make a 50% water change. I use pumps and
hoses. The new water is pumped in with a hose that goes to the botom of
the tank, and a sock on the end of the hose. That way the new water stays
at the bottom of the tank (100% water change and fish, and corals don't
mind). The old water goes down the overflow. The one and only pump on the
system that pumps the water from the sump to the tank, is swiched with
valves to pumping water from the sump to the bath tub, and down the drain.
So I do a 50% water change on the tank, and the water in the tank never
drops. During the process, the fish and corals at the bottom half (realy
about 2/3 of the tank) experience a short term 100% water change, and are
not bothered by it.

Wayne Sallee
Wayne's Pets



  #13  
Old July 6th 06, 06:29 PM posted to rec.aquaria.marine.reefs
George Patterson
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 523
Default water change advice

Wayne Sallee wrote:

See plumbing pictures at C:\Documents and Settings\Wayne Sallee\My
Stuff\My Web Page\waynesallee.com\plumbingpictures.htm


I don't seem to have that on my C drive. :-)

George Patterson
Coffee is only a way of stealing time that should by rights belong to
your slightly older self.
 




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