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#1
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Hello,
I'm planning a new tank and am trying to work out how best to hide the heater. I am intending on building a polystyrene background and was wondering about adding a wide-ish plastic tube to the filter tube and inserting the heater inside this. This would then be placed flat on the back of the tank, behind the background. At the end of the tube would either be something to deflect the water 90 degs into the tank, or I would just have it near on end so the jet of water hit the end of the tank. Any comments ? My main concerns are safety and being able to get at the heater in case I need to. This idea would allow me to get at the heater as it would be up at the top of the tank where I could reach it. It should be effective as the water flowing into the tank would flow directly around the heater. What concerns me is if there are any safety implications in this. Any and all comments welcome as usual. -- Alan Silver |
#2
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probably not, because the heater gets SO SO hot, and will probably melt the
plastic... My heater made a spot on the side of my CO2 reactor before I realized it and moved it... went to grab it and nearly singed my finger on it... that's how I know how HOT it got... "Alan Silver" wrote in message ... Hello, I'm planning a new tank and am trying to work out how best to hide the heater. I am intending on building a polystyrene background and was wondering about adding a wide-ish plastic tube to the filter tube and inserting the heater inside this. This would then be placed flat on the back of the tank, behind the background. At the end of the tube would either be something to deflect the water 90 degs into the tank, or I would just have it near on end so the jet of water hit the end of the tank. Any comments ? My main concerns are safety and being able to get at the heater in case I need to. This idea would allow me to get at the heater as it would be up at the top of the tank where I could reach it. It should be effective as the water flowing into the tank would flow directly around the heater. What concerns me is if there are any safety implications in this. Any and all comments welcome as usual. -- Alan Silver |
#3
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Tetra makes a Hang on Back filter with an integral heater. The PF500 can
have a heater placed in the pump compartment. The only draw back to this heater is that it is SOOOOO noisy. Not motor sounds, just water trickling. Our 12 had two PF500's and we had to turn up the TV so loud it hurt. We took them to our showroom tank and replaced them with two Bio-Wheels. Peace at last. JOhn :-) "Alan Silver" wrote in message ... Hello, I'm planning a new tank and am trying to work out how best to hide the heater. I am intending on building a polystyrene background and was wondering about adding a wide-ish plastic tube to the filter tube and inserting the heater inside this. This would then be placed flat on the back of the tank, behind the background. At the end of the tube would either be something to deflect the water 90 degs into the tank, or I would just have it near on end so the jet of water hit the end of the tank. Any comments ? My main concerns are safety and being able to get at the heater in case I need to. This idea would allow me to get at the heater as it would be up at the top of the tank where I could reach it. It should be effective as the water flowing into the tank would flow directly around the heater. What concerns me is if there are any safety implications in this. Any and all comments welcome as usual. -- Alan Silver |
#4
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In article , AQUATIC-STORE.
COM writes You would need something to circulate water around the tube and create a flow. I was thinking of using a tube just a bit wider than the heater. That way, the water is forced to flow past the heater as it goes down the tube. Something like ... ============================ In _________________________ -- |___heater_________________ -- to tank ============================ Where the two == lines are the wide plastic tube and the __ lines are the heater. The water flows from the filter (just to the left of this e-mail !!) along the plastic tube, ie around the heater) and out of the right hand end into the tank. NetMax suggested having the heater on the water going into the filter rather than out of it, but the principle is the same. -- Alan Silver |
#5
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In article , NetMax
writes It would depend on the heater's wattage. I haven't worked out if this configuration would be more or less efficient than the normal way. That would influence the wattage of heater I would need. It is to be a 220 litre tank, so I guess I would go with the standard rating for that size (yet to be confirmed) and see how it goes. I guess if it is too much, the heater just won't come on as often as it might. I doubt that this method would be less efficient at heating the water than just having the heater sitting around somewhere in the tank, but if it were, I could always either replace it, or buy a second small heater to sit somewhere else in the tank. This configuration is usually with the heater in the input to the filter. I guess that mixes the heat better, heats according to tank's temperature and not filter's temperature, and is a bit more fail-safe if the filter should fail. I think 200W is getting high enough to melt plastic. I only suggested the outlet from the filter as that would be easier in practice, but I see your point. It would be harder to work out how to fit it in to the inlet, but it could be done. I think your idea will work. Test it by turning off the filter for a few hours, while the heater is running. In this mode, it will not provide any significant heat to the aquarium. Note that your filter's pump becomes a heater component, as any interruption in flow causes the heater to be inadequate. Considering the likelyhood, ymmv. I'm not planning on switching off the filter for any long periods. Eheim reckon you only need to clean them every 3-6 months !! Riskier with planted tanks where leaves can clog the filter's intake, slowly compromising your ability to heat uniformly. If your intake had a large grid to capture debris before the siphon, then this is less of a concern. Malawi tank, so little or no plants (unfortunately) Thanx for the reply -- Alan Silver |
#6
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Alan,
A while back, I added a sump (DIY wet/dry trickle filter) to one of my aquariums. I highly recommend it as it gives you a place to put all that stuff like thermometers, heaters, etc. Since I inject CO2 on the return line, I've got nothing in my tank except the spray wand for the return and an overflow skimmer! Using clear poly for these makes for nearly nothing to detract from the aquascape and the fish! Just my $0.02 worth!! Best luck! -Doug Alan Silver wrote: Hello, I'm planning a new tank and am trying to work out how best to hide the heater. I am intending on building a polystyrene background and was wondering about adding a wide-ish plastic tube to the filter tube and inserting the heater inside this. This would then be placed flat on the back of the tank, behind the background. At the end of the tube would either be something to deflect the water 90 degs into the tank, or I would just have it near on end so the jet of water hit the end of the tank. Any comments ? My main concerns are safety and being able to get at the heater in case I need to. This idea would allow me to get at the heater as it would be up at the top of the tank where I could reach it. It should be effective as the water flowing into the tank would flow directly around the heater. What concerns me is if there are any safety implications in this. Any and all comments welcome as usual. -- Alan Silver -- Spammers be DAMNED! Friendlies: change notmail to hotmail to reply. Just keeping the web bots and crawlers from filling our inboxes with junk! May they eternally spam addresses that swamp their servers with bounced mail! |
#7
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In article , NetMax
writes Malawi tank, so little or no plants (unfortunately) There is still a modest assortment of plants possible with mbuna. Just have the plants in there first, protect the roots (ie: Amazon Swords) or have water column feeders (Pennywort, Hornwort), and try bad tasting plants (Onion bulbs) or less destructable plants (ie: Anubius) and introduce the fish as juveniles. I was going to use plants, but my idea of "little or no plants" means only a light covering, ie where you can still see the back of the tank !! My idea of a planted tank is where you have to hunt the fish !! I got a good list from Tropica's site. You can choose fish-proof plants to suit low light conditions. I was going to try some in there. The best reason to try something is sometimes because someone says it's impossible ;~) ;-) Thanx as ever -- Alan Silver |
#8
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In article , Doug
writes A while back, I added a sump (DIY wet/dry trickle filter) to one of my aquariums. I highly recommend it as it gives you a place to put all that stuff like thermometers, heaters, etc. Since I inject CO2 on the return line, I've got nothing in my tank except the spray wand for the return and an overflow skimmer! Using clear poly for these makes for nearly nothing to detract from the aquascape and the fish! Just my $0.02 worth!! Best luck! Is this like a small tank underneath the main one ? I've seen these on marine tanks, but never worked out how you stop the lower one overflowing. How is yours done ? TIA -- Alan Silver |
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