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Rubbermaid vs. the real deal



 
 
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  #1  
Old July 10th 04, 12:13 AM
Perry
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Default Rubbermaid vs. the real deal

Hello All from a first time postee,

I am making my first foray into ponding. I'm familiar with the products and
techniques, but have never actually used them. To practice, I've bought a
large Rubbermaid type storage bin from Wal-Mart which I intend to disguise
well and stock with literally one or two small mosquito fish or tadpoles
from a nearby pond.

My question: Does that type of plastic emit any dangerous chemicals or
gases into the water that would poison flora or fauna? I'm not looking for
long-term quality, just short term practice.

Thanks.


  #2  
Old July 10th 04, 02:03 AM
Charles
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Default Rubbermaid vs. the real deal

On Fri, 9 Jul 2004 19:13:22 -0400, "Perry"
wrote:

Hello All from a first time postee,

I am making my first foray into ponding. I'm familiar with the products and
techniques, but have never actually used them. To practice, I've bought a
large Rubbermaid type storage bin from Wal-Mart which I intend to disguise
well and stock with literally one or two small mosquito fish or tadpoles
from a nearby pond.

My question: Does that type of plastic emit any dangerous chemicals or
gases into the water that would poison flora or fauna? I'm not looking for
long-term quality, just short term practice.

Thanks.



They work well, I used one for years, until I poked a hole in it.

totally safe.


--

- Charles
-
-does not play well with others
  #3  
Old July 10th 04, 06:17 AM
Michael Lee
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Default Rubbermaid vs. the real deal

Charles wrote:

On Fri, 9 Jul 2004 19:13:22 -0400, "Perry"
wrote:

Hello All from a first time postee,

I am making my first foray into ponding. I'm familiar with the
products and techniques, but have never actually used them. To
practice, I've bought a large Rubbermaid type storage bin from
Wal-Mart which I intend to disguise well and stock with literally one
or two small mosquito fish or tadpoles from a nearby pond.

My question: Does that type of plastic emit any dangerous chemicals
or gases into the water that would poison flora or fauna? I'm not
looking for long-term quality, just short term practice.

Thanks.



They work well, I used one for years, until I poked a hole in it.

totally safe.



The only issue I can think of is UV deterioration. I have only had
plastic (Rubber Made type stuff) last a couple of years, but if you only
want it for short term, go for it.
  #4  
Old July 10th 04, 03:39 PM
external usenet poster
 
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Default Rubbermaid vs. the real deal

rubbermaids are water and food safe and highly recommended for use with fish. not so
all other types of plastic. Ingrid

"Perry" wrote:

Hello All from a first time postee,

I am making my first foray into ponding. I'm familiar with the products and
techniques, but have never actually used them. To practice, I've bought a
large Rubbermaid type storage bin from Wal-Mart which I intend to disguise
well and stock with literally one or two small mosquito fish or tadpoles
from a nearby pond.

My question: Does that type of plastic emit any dangerous chemicals or
gases into the water that would poison flora or fauna? I'm not looking for
long-term quality, just short term practice.

Thanks.




~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List
http://puregold.aquaria.net/
www.drsolo.com
Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other
compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the
endorsements or recommendations I make.
  #5  
Old July 10th 04, 04:35 PM
Mark Bannister
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Default Rubbermaid vs. the real deal

As a plastics person I can tell you that almost all plastics will be
safe for fish. Some products may have surface contamination. Wash
thoroughly. Food grade plastics typically are rated such because they
are safe when exposed to heat, acids or oils that may be in food. These
may cause chemicals to leach from the plastic.
As mentioned the only issue you will have is UV stability. Keep it out
of direct sunlight.
Mark B.
PS: Speaking of plastics, since I am in the plastics business I have
access to plastic pellets. I've noticed some filters use them usually
as a prefilter. Any experience out there? Pros? Cons?

Perry wrote:
Hello All from a first time postee,

I am making my first foray into ponding. I'm familiar with the products and
techniques, but have never actually used them. To practice, I've bought a
large Rubbermaid type storage bin from Wal-Mart which I intend to disguise
well and stock with literally one or two small mosquito fish or tadpoles
from a nearby pond.

My question: Does that type of plastic emit any dangerous chemicals or
gases into the water that would poison flora or fauna? I'm not looking for
long-term quality, just short term practice.

Thanks.



  #6  
Old July 10th 04, 06:05 PM
Dances With Ferrets
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Posts: n/a
Default Rubbermaid vs. the real deal

I see no problem with this...... I used to use the rubber-maid tubs
for cheap breeding aquaria.... one side cut out with a slat of glass
or plexi-glass glued in for observation from the side. I see no
reason why they can't be used outdoors.... If your looking for
something a lot more sturdy... check your local hardware/feed store
for stock-tanks or feeding troughs.... they are much thicker, more UV
resistant, and generally better in every way.... some even come with
removable drain plugs. We use large 300 gallon stock tanks at my
workplace for keeping koi, goldfish, and floating plants during pond
season.

Good luck in your pond-keeping endeavors.
  #7  
Old July 10th 04, 06:11 PM
Ka30P
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Default Rubbermaid vs. the real deal


If you use a 150 gallon or even 75 gallon
stock tank
you can use that learning pond as a plant
filter when you do your big pond.
Or leave as a pretty water feature.
Or use it as an isolation tank for future
fish buys.
We have the 150 gallon as the header pond
in our waterfall. Water comes in at the bottom
and out thru drilled holes with bits of pipe in them at the top.



kathy :-)
algae primer
http://hometown.aol.com/ka30p/myhomepage/garden.html
  #8  
Old July 10th 04, 07:27 PM
Gary
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Default Rubbermaid vs. the real deal

I have used a 300-gal Rubbermaid stock tank as a fish pond for the
past 10+ years with no problems at all. I'm sure this is a different
type of material from what they use in the storage bins they make, but
Rubbermaid is generally reliable and safe.
Gary
  #9  
Old July 11th 04, 01:51 AM
RichToyBox
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Default Rubbermaid vs. the real deal

All of the bead filters, converted sand filters, use polyethylene beads.
The specific gravity is just less than 1.00 and as such they float and the
water flowing up through them is filtered nicely. Being near the same
specific gravity as water, they are easily backwashed, with the tumbling
action getting all of the material filtered sent to waste. Someone on here
was looking for a source several months ago.
--
RichToyBox
http://www.geocities.com/richtoybox/pondintro.html
"Mark Bannister" wrote in message
. ..
As a plastics person I can tell you that almost all plastics will be
safe for fish. Some products may have surface contamination. Wash
thoroughly. Food grade plastics typically are rated such because they
are safe when exposed to heat, acids or oils that may be in food. These
may cause chemicals to leach from the plastic.
As mentioned the only issue you will have is UV stability. Keep it out
of direct sunlight.
Mark B.
PS: Speaking of plastics, since I am in the plastics business I have
access to plastic pellets. I've noticed some filters use them usually
as a prefilter. Any experience out there? Pros? Cons?

Perry wrote:
Hello All from a first time postee,

I am making my first foray into ponding. I'm familiar with the products

and
techniques, but have never actually used them. To practice, I've bought

a
large Rubbermaid type storage bin from Wal-Mart which I intend to

disguise
well and stock with literally one or two small mosquito fish or tadpoles
from a nearby pond.

My question: Does that type of plastic emit any dangerous chemicals or
gases into the water that would poison flora or fauna? I'm not looking

for
long-term quality, just short term practice.

Thanks.





  #10  
Old July 12th 04, 02:57 PM
Mark Bannister
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Posts: n/a
Default Rubbermaid vs. the real deal

As far as sources there are many, but for most you will have to buy
50-1000 pounds at a minimum. Then again at a market rate of $.30-$.60
per pound that's not so bad.
Most sources also will require business accounts. Brokers like General
Polymers/Ashland (https://ccenter.ashland.com) or GE Polymerland
(http://www.gepolymerland.com) may be better able to handle consumer orders.


RichToyBox wrote:
All of the bead filters, converted sand filters, use polyethylene beads.
The specific gravity is just less than 1.00 and as such they float and the
water flowing up through them is filtered nicely. Being near the same
specific gravity as water, they are easily backwashed, with the tumbling
action getting all of the material filtered sent to waste. Someone on here
was looking for a source several months ago.


 




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