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![]() "Chris_S" wrote in message ... I've got several EBOs. As far as I know you can put them under water. It's just not too easy getting to the temp knob when you do that. I always thought highly of the EBOs in the past, but recently I'm not so sure anymore. For all their claims about their temp accuracy, they just don't bare out. Recently I got a digital temp thermometer. I verified it was correct by checking it against another of my lab grade digitals. It was within 0.25C. Very good. But my EBO's were way off. One was 5F high and the other was 3F high. You set for 80F and the water temp was 85F. I had to set it down to 75F to get the water at 80F were I wanted it. Virtually all of the built-in temp gauges on heaters I have tested are wrong. I just don't trust any of them anymore. My advice is to invest $15 in a digital temp thermometer and just use the heater gauges for adjusting them. Their accuracy is just too questionable. Chris. snip I see heaters having 3 parameters of interest, absolute accuracy, relative accuracy and drift. Absolute accuracy is defined as how close the water temp. is to the set point (on the dial). Analogs thermostat heaters are between infinity (no number on dial) and about 4-6F (ie:Thermals). I find the digital thermostat equipped heaters are better, at around 3-4F accuracy. This factory adjustment is done in a high speed manufacturing environment, probably in the atmosphere, instead of submerged with a long dwell time. Fortunately, it's your least important parameter, as the heater should be adjusted to a thermometer. Relative accuracy is your most important parameter, which is how much does the temperature bounce around. Typically, you can see about 2F bounce, and the doctrine is that a 3F change in 24 hours is fine for fish, so heaters are generally well within that range. Compare the tank temperature early in the AM to late in the day to compare. More than 2F drift might be your lights warming the tank beyond the heater's set point though. Drift is..- drift ![]() temperature is slowly (over months) going up or down. This is an ailment of digital thermostat heaters, related to solid state fatigue, especially the earlier models. As long as the range of your dial still lets you adjust up or down, you have a bit of time to buy another heater, but eventually you run out of adjustment range, and beware that drift can accelerate quickly. Contact the manufacturer as they might be able to help. If your EBOs are relatively accurate and not drifting, then your fish are happy, so you can be too ![]() NetMax |
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