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Hi. I had a 55 gallon tank many years ago set up for marine fish. I
recently took it out of the garage and got it ready for tropical fish. I've been reading up all the great info in newsgroups and the net in general, but there is one thing about changing water that I don't see addressed. I'm seeing that approximately 20% of the water should be changed every, say, 2 weeks. For me, this means about 10 gallons each time. This seems awfully difficult to achieve without killing anything in the process. How do you handle this volume of water? There is a bathroom about 15 feet from the tank, and I could see siphoning the water out without much problem, but getting the fresh water back in is more of a problem. The issues I am not sure about are 1) 10 gallons is a lot of buckets to mess with, is there a better way? 2) the room temperature is much lower than the tank water, which is about 77F, 3) do most people dechlorinate chemically rather than letting it stand for a day? If I let the water stand, then it will be too cold. If I use chemical treatment, can I use hot and cold water to adjust the temp? Also, it seems like these large water changes are a little excessive. When I was a teenager I did minimal (very minimal) and the fish lived for years. My angles grew very large in their 29 gallon tank, ate well, and even layed eggs. It didn't seem like they were stressed. Maybe I just had ultra hardy fish, but I did have live plants, so maybe that helped. Thanks for any suggestions, dwhite |
#2
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Your question about water changes can almost be summed up with one word:
Python. I used the bucket/siphon/wet carpet method for my 20, 40 and 100 freshwater tanks for years before I got a Python for my birthday. Doing a 20% water change directly to the tank and then treating chemically for a de-chlorination (I use Amquel) right after the tank has worked well for me. I do lean to add just a bit more Amquel than needed through just to capture any major fluxuations my tap may have. Keep in mind that most municipalities use Chloramine rather than Chlorine. Chloramine will stick around a lot longer than Chlorine will and not all de-chlorinators treat for both chlorine and chloramine. I just adjust the tap for temperture control however my tanks have a high rate of water circulation and my heaters are set up in a manner that they can still function with the water at about half tank. Therefore, I don't need to shut down my circulation or my heater during the water changes. Which means that I have more flexibility with the water temp coming out of the tap. Also, I too have found that live plants go along way in improving the health of the fish and tank. Justin "Dan White" wrote in message et... Hi. I had a 55 gallon tank many years ago set up for marine fish. I recently took it out of the garage and got it ready for tropical fish. I've been reading up all the great info in newsgroups and the net in general, but there is one thing about changing water that I don't see addressed. I'm seeing that approximately 20% of the water should be changed every, say, 2 weeks. For me, this means about 10 gallons each time. This seems awfully difficult to achieve without killing anything in the process. How do you handle this volume of water? There is a bathroom about 15 feet from the tank, and I could see siphoning the water out without much problem, but getting the fresh water back in is more of a problem. The issues I am not sure about are 1) 10 gallons is a lot of buckets to mess with, is there a better way? 2) the room temperature is much lower than the tank water, which is about 77F, 3) do most people dechlorinate chemically rather than letting it stand for a day? If I let the water stand, then it will be too cold. If I use chemical treatment, can I use hot and cold water to adjust the temp? Also, it seems like these large water changes are a little excessive. When I was a teenager I did minimal (very minimal) and the fish lived for years. My angles grew very large in their 29 gallon tank, ate well, and even layed eggs. It didn't seem like they were stressed. Maybe I just had ultra hardy fish, but I did have live plants, so maybe that helped. Thanks for any suggestions, dwhite |
#3
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![]() "Dan White" wrote in message et... Hi. I had a 55 gallon tank many years ago set up for marine fish. I recently took it out of the garage and got it ready for tropical fish. I've been reading up all the great info in newsgroups and the net in general, but there is one thing about changing water that I don't see addressed. I can only tell you how *I* do my freshwater tanks- I keep a planted Discus tank and a Fancy Goldfish tank, and I do both the same way. I siphon water out with a long piece of one inch tubing- one tank gets siphoned out a window to the backyard, the other goes out a door to a flowerbed. Then I drag a plain old garden hose in through whichever window/door I am using and turn it on in the tank. I add Prime as the tank is filling. That's it. So much for Discus being difficult. I am blessed with very warm groundwater due to my climate. If it gets very cold I will draw out water into a dedicated garbage can and heat it with an aquarium heater overnight, then pump it into the tank with a small water pump. I found the Python to be the biggest PIA I ever ran into- I cut it up and made plain siphon hoses out of it. I really think that the simpler you keep your process the more likely you will do it often- I do all my tanks once per week. And as you can see- even the most finicky fish will likely adjust to your local water. -- Toni http://www.cearbhaill.com/discus.htm |
#4
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![]() "Toni" wrote in message ... "Dan White" wrote in message et... Hi. I had a 55 gallon tank many years ago set up for marine fish. I recently took it out of the garage and got it ready for tropical fish. I've been reading up all the great info in newsgroups and the net in general, but there is one thing about changing water that I don't see addressed. I can only tell you how *I* do my freshwater tanks- I keep a planted Discus tank and a Fancy Goldfish tank, and I do both the same way. I siphon water out with a long piece of one inch tubing- one tank gets siphoned out a window to the backyard, the other goes out a door to a flowerbed. Then I drag a plain old garden hose in through whichever window/door I am using and turn it on in the tank. I add Prime as the tank is filling. That's it. So much for Discus being difficult. I am blessed with very warm groundwater due to my climate. If it gets very cold I will draw out water into a dedicated garbage can and heat it with an aquarium heater overnight, then pump it into the tank with a small water pump. I found the Python to be the biggest PIA I ever ran into- I cut it up and made plain siphon hoses out of it. I really think that the simpler you keep your process the more likely you will do it often- I do all my tanks once per week. And as you can see- even the most finicky fish will likely adjust to your local water. -- Toni http://www.cearbhaill.com/discus.htm Toni, The discus tank is absolutely beautiful. They look awesome in there. And I'm amazed at your excellent photography, too! Nice work. Mary |
#5
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Dan White wrote:
Hi. I had a 55 gallon tank many years ago set up for marine fish. I recently took it out of the garage and got it ready for tropical fish. I've been reading up all the great info in newsgroups and the net in general, but there is one thing about changing water that I don't see addressed. I'm seeing that approximately 20% of the water should be changed every, say, 2 weeks. For me, this means about 10 gallons each time. This seems awfully difficult to achieve without killing anything in the process. How do you handle this volume of water? There is a bathroom about 15 feet from the tank, and I could see siphoning the water out without much problem, but getting the fresh water back in is more of a problem. The issues I am not sure about are 1) 10 gallons is a lot of buckets to mess with, is there a better way? 2) the room temperature is much lower than the tank water, which is about 77F, 3) do most people dechlorinate chemically rather than letting it stand for a day? If I let the water stand, then it will be too cold. If I use chemical treatment, can I use hot and cold water to adjust the temp? Also, it seems like these large water changes are a little excessive. When I was a teenager I did minimal (very minimal) and the fish lived for years. My angles grew very large in their 29 gallon tank, ate well, and even layed eggs. It didn't seem like they were stressed. Maybe I just had ultra hardy fish, but I did have live plants, so maybe that helped. Thanks for any suggestions, dwhite I plan to do 20% every week in my new 55. Given the rock work I'll have in the tank, two 5 gallon buckets should handle the incoming water (will actually be more than 20%), the outgoing water will siphon to the water drain in my basement where the tank is located. I plan to purchase two cheapie Wal-Mart or whatever smallest heaters I can find. I will plug those up, set the right temp, drop the cheapest powerhead I can find into each one, treat with Amquel, raise pH, and let them sit a week till the next water change keeping warm and circulating. The water will then be pre-treated, warm, and damned well oxygenated. Then, those cheapie powerheads will pump the buckets into the tank with the little bit left being poured in. Temp won't be a problem. I have to do it this way since I live in MN and tap water gets danged cold all the time. I also have a whole house water softener so I have to get my water from either outside or the kitchen sink cold tap....those are the unsoftened outlets. Outside in MN in the winter is out of the question so I have to get cold from inside...and it's REALLLY cold in January ;-) The two cheapie heaters will be required. That's my plan, and my 2c. -Keith |
#6
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"Justin Boucher" wrote in message
news ![]() Your question about water changes can almost be summed up with one word: Python. I used the bucket/siphon/wet carpet method for my 20, 40 and 100 freshwater tanks for years before I got a Python for my birthday. Doing a 20% water change directly to the tank and then treating chemically for a de-chlorination (I use Amquel) right after the tank has worked well for me. I do lean to add just a bit more Amquel than needed through just to capture any major fluxuations my tap may have. I'll have to check into that Python. Are you saying that you dump tap water straight from the tap into your tank, and then dechlorinate the whole thank with Amquel? That's pretty amazing if that's what you are doing. I wouldn't have guessed you could get away with that! Thanks to the others who responded. dwhite |
#7
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"Keith Hatfull" wrote in message
... Dan White wrote: Hi. I had a 55 gallon tank many years ago set up for marine fish. I recently took it out of the garage and got it ready for tropical fish. I've been reading up all the great info in newsgroups and the net in general, but there is one thing about changing water that I don't see addressed. I'm seeing that approximately 20% of the water should be changed every, say, 2 weeks. For me, this means about 10 gallons each time. This seems awfully difficult to achieve without killing anything in the process. How do you handle this volume of water? There is a bathroom about 15 feet from the tank, and I could see siphoning the water out without much problem, but getting the fresh water back in is more of a problem. The issues I am not sure about are 1) 10 gallons is a lot of buckets to mess with, is there a better way? 2) the room temperature is much lower than the tank water, which is about 77F, 3) do most people dechlorinate chemically rather than letting it stand for a day? If I let the water stand, then it will be too cold. If I use chemical treatment, can I use hot and cold water to adjust the temp? Also, it seems like these large water changes are a little excessive. When I was a teenager I did minimal (very minimal) and the fish lived for years. My angles grew very large in their 29 gallon tank, ate well, and even layed eggs. It didn't seem like they were stressed. Maybe I just had ultra hardy fish, but I did have live plants, so maybe that helped. Thanks for any suggestions, dwhite I plan to do 20% every week in my new 55. Given the rock work I'll have in the tank, two 5 gallon buckets should handle the incoming water (will actually be more than 20%), the outgoing water will siphon to the water drain in my basement where the tank is located. I plan to purchase two cheapie Wal-Mart or whatever smallest heaters I can find. I will plug those up, set the right temp, drop the cheapest powerhead I can find into each one, treat with Amquel, raise pH, and let them sit a week till the next water change keeping warm and circulating. The water will then be pre-treated, warm, and damned well oxygenated. Then, those cheapie powerheads will pump the buckets into the tank with the little bit left being poured in. Temp won't be a problem. I have to do it this way since I live in MN and tap water gets danged cold all the time. I also have a whole house water softener so I have to get my water from either outside or the kitchen sink cold tap....those are the unsoftened outlets. Outside in MN in the winter is out of the question so I have to get cold from inside...and it's REALLLY cold in January ;-) The two cheapie heaters will be required. That's my plan, and my 2c. -Keith I also worry about my well water being too cold and having dissolved gases in it. What has been working for me is to keep to smaller changes done more often, and keeping live plants. I find that I can do a 15% change without any trouble (Canadian winter ice cold water from before the softener). -- www.NetMax.tk |
#8
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Yes. That's how it works. Just did one day before yesterday in fact. I
love watching the oxygen stream off the live plants after a good water change. It's amaizing how fine the bubbles are and they seem to only be coming off of one particular spot on the leaf. I only worry about major water changes like 50%. The amount of chloramine, pH and temp shock could be a bit too much. I much rather do lots of smaller water changes over a short period of time. Keep in mind that my system is still running while I'm doing the changes. I don't need to shut down the pumps or the heater, so the new tap water doesn't pool in one spot. It quickly gets disbursed and dissolved among the tank water. Justin "Dan White" wrote in message et... "Justin Boucher" wrote in message news ![]() Your question about water changes can almost be summed up with one word: Python. I used the bucket/siphon/wet carpet method for my 20, 40 and 100 freshwater tanks for years before I got a Python for my birthday. Doing a 20% water change directly to the tank and then treating chemically for a de-chlorination (I use Amquel) right after the tank has worked well for me. I do lean to add just a bit more Amquel than needed through just to capture any major fluxuations my tap may have. I'll have to check into that Python. Are you saying that you dump tap water straight from the tap into your tank, and then dechlorinate the whole thank with Amquel? That's pretty amazing if that's what you are doing. I wouldn't have guessed you could get away with that! Thanks to the others who responded. dwhite |
#9
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"Justin Boucher" wrote in message
... Yes. That's how it works. Just did one day before yesterday in fact. I love watching the oxygen stream off the live plants after a good water change. It's amaizing how fine the bubbles are and they seem to only be coming off of one particular spot on the leaf. I only worry about major water changes like 50%. The amount of chloramine, pH and temp shock could be a bit too much. I much rather do lots of smaller water changes over a short period of time. Keep in mind that my system is still running while I'm doing the changes. I don't need to shut down the pumps or the heater, so the new tap water doesn't pool in one spot. It quickly gets disbursed and dissolved among the tank water. Justin One last thing, Justin. When you add Amquel, you are using a dose appropriate for the 20% of fresh water (or a little more than needed) after it has mixed with the rest of the tank. Does the Amquel work well enough in such a dilute state to be able to get at all the chlorine/chloramines? Have you ever tested your tank water before and after adding Amquel to see what happens to the chlorine levels? dwhite "Dan White" wrote in message et... "Justin Boucher" wrote in message news ![]() Your question about water changes can almost be summed up with one word: Python. I used the bucket/siphon/wet carpet method for my 20, 40 and 100 freshwater tanks for years before I got a Python for my birthday. Doing a 20% water change directly to the tank and then treating chemically for a de-chlorination (I use Amquel) right after the tank has worked well for me. I do lean to add just a bit more Amquel than needed through just to capture any major fluxuations my tap may have. I'll have to check into that Python. Are you saying that you dump tap water straight from the tap into your tank, and then dechlorinate the whole thank with Amquel? That's pretty amazing if that's what you are doing. I wouldn't have guessed you could get away with that! Thanks to the others who responded. dwhite |
#10
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I've never had a chlorine or chloramine tester so I wouldn't be able to
compare the difference. I do overdose the tank immediately after the refill with Amquel. I'll usually add a extra dose or two. If the 20% change needed a 20ml dose of Amquel, I'll most likely add 30ml. Since Amquel is a chemical agent designed to convert chloramine and chlorine, it will disburse through the water column until either all the chlorine agents are consumed or all the Amquel is used. I've even seen an LFS owner put an entire 16oz bottle in a 20 gal (stocked at LFS retail levels) just to see if it is harmful to the fish. Not a single fish died or showed any adverse reactions even after several days.. Occasionally, I will even add the Amquel while the Python is filling the tank. I just add enough Amquel to cover the full water change. Justin "Dan White" wrote in message et... "Justin Boucher" wrote in message ... Yes. That's how it works. Just did one day before yesterday in fact. I love watching the oxygen stream off the live plants after a good water change. It's amaizing how fine the bubbles are and they seem to only be coming off of one particular spot on the leaf. I only worry about major water changes like 50%. The amount of chloramine, pH and temp shock could be a bit too much. I much rather do lots of smaller water changes over a short period of time. Keep in mind that my system is still running while I'm doing the changes. I don't need to shut down the pumps or the heater, so the new tap water doesn't pool in one spot. It quickly gets disbursed and dissolved among the tank water. Justin One last thing, Justin. When you add Amquel, you are using a dose appropriate for the 20% of fresh water (or a little more than needed) after it has mixed with the rest of the tank. Does the Amquel work well enough in such a dilute state to be able to get at all the chlorine/chloramines? Have you ever tested your tank water before and after adding Amquel to see what happens to the chlorine levels? dwhite "Dan White" wrote in message et... "Justin Boucher" wrote in message news ![]() word: Python. I used the bucket/siphon/wet carpet method for my 20, 40 and 100 freshwater tanks for years before I got a Python for my birthday. Doing a 20% water change directly to the tank and then treating chemically for a de-chlorination (I use Amquel) right after the tank has worked well for me. I do lean to add just a bit more Amquel than needed through just to capture any major fluxuations my tap may have. I'll have to check into that Python. Are you saying that you dump tap water straight from the tap into your tank, and then dechlorinate the whole thank with Amquel? That's pretty amazing if that's what you are doing. I wouldn't have guessed you could get away with that! Thanks to the others who responded. dwhite |
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