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#1
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I was curious to know how many people out there reduce the current flow in
their tanks to simulate calmer night oceans? I have a 240 FOWLR and although there are good hiding spots in the LR for the fish to sleep in, I'm afraid that once the tank is fully stocked, sleeping arrangements will be quite tight. Also, fish size plays a part. I'm aiming at Butterflies and Angels which get rather large. Currently I have ~2000gph returned through two sea swirls 24/7. No other water movement in the tank. Just the Sea Swirls rotating the returned water around. Thank you, Justin |
#2
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![]() "Justin Boucher" wrote in message ... I was curious to know how many people out there reduce the current flow in their tanks to simulate calmer night oceans? I have a 240 FOWLR and although there are good hiding spots in the LR for the fish to sleep in, I'm afraid that once the tank is fully stocked, sleeping arrangements will be quite tight. Also, fish size plays a part. I'm aiming at Butterflies and Angels which get rather large. Currently I have ~2000gph returned through two sea swirls 24/7. No other water movement in the tank. Just the Sea Swirls rotating the returned water around. I do not try to simulate clam night. I have several pumps. One main [Mag 12] pump to keep the current 24/7 for 100USG. There will alway be water return from the sump and refugium. The others in the tank can be off or on which depend on my mood or whatever the reason. One main thing you need to take note is - try not to have dead-spot from anywhere in the tank. CapFusion,... |
#3
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There is no case for lower night time flow in aquaria, I have logged 272
night dives and the currents are the same as in the day, yes there are variations, but non more so than during the day. Regardless of what water propulsion pumps you use to create flow in your aquarium, none come close to just how strong real currents are on real reefs. "CapFusion" CapeFussion...@hotmail.., com wrote in message ... "Justin Boucher" wrote in message ... I was curious to know how many people out there reduce the current flow in their tanks to simulate calmer night oceans? I have a 240 FOWLR and although there are good hiding spots in the LR for the fish to sleep in, I'm afraid that once the tank is fully stocked, sleeping arrangements will be quite tight. Also, fish size plays a part. I'm aiming at Butterflies and Angels which get rather large. Currently I have ~2000gph returned through two sea swirls 24/7. No other water movement in the tank. Just the Sea Swirls rotating the returned water around. I do not try to simulate clam night. I have several pumps. One main [Mag 12] pump to keep the current 24/7 for 100USG. There will alway be water return from the sump and refugium. The others in the tank can be off or on which depend on my mood or whatever the reason. One main thing you need to take note is - try not to have dead-spot from anywhere in the tank. CapFusion,... |
#4
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I know what you mean. We did a little snorkling in Jamiaca and the amount
of water passing over those reefs is insane. We're talking about rooms full of water just sweeping by. I did notice however that the waves really calmed down at night. Is it just a misconception that calmer surface water at night equals calmer currents underwater? I don't want to cause any undue stress for my fish during the night shift. I know more hiding spaces would be a great solution, but the finances won't allow an increase in LR at the moment. Thanks, Justin "ReeFeR_MaN" wrote in message ... There is no case for lower night time flow in aquaria, I have logged 272 night dives and the currents are the same as in the day, yes there are variations, but non more so than during the day. Regardless of what water propulsion pumps you use to create flow in your aquarium, none come close to just how strong real currents are on real reefs. "CapFusion" CapeFussion...@hotmail.., com wrote in message ... "Justin Boucher" wrote in message ... I was curious to know how many people out there reduce the current flow in their tanks to simulate calmer night oceans? I have a 240 FOWLR and although there are good hiding spots in the LR for the fish to sleep in, I'm afraid that once the tank is fully stocked, sleeping arrangements will be quite tight. Also, fish size plays a part. I'm aiming at Butterflies and Angels which get rather large. Currently I have ~2000gph returned through two sea swirls 24/7. No other water movement in the tank. Just the Sea Swirls rotating the returned water around. I do not try to simulate clam night. I have several pumps. One main [Mag 12] pump to keep the current 24/7 for 100USG. There will alway be water return from the sump and refugium. The others in the tank can be off or on which depend on my mood or whatever the reason. One main thing you need to take note is - try not to have dead-spot from anywhere in the tank. CapFusion,... |
#5
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I agree. I encountered the strongest current in over 100 dives, during a
night dive in the Maldives. The fish all managed to find quiet places amongst the rocks on the reef or in small caves etc. They do exactly that in my tank. Phil "Justin Boucher" wrote in message ... I know what you mean. We did a little snorkling in Jamiaca and the amount of water passing over those reefs is insane. We're talking about rooms full of water just sweeping by. I did notice however that the waves really calmed down at night. Is it just a misconception that calmer surface water at night equals calmer currents underwater? I don't want to cause any undue stress for my fish during the night shift. I know more hiding spaces would be a great solution, but the finances won't allow an increase in LR at the moment. Thanks, Justin "ReeFeR_MaN" wrote in message ... There is no case for lower night time flow in aquaria, I have logged 272 night dives and the currents are the same as in the day, yes there are variations, but non more so than during the day. Regardless of what water propulsion pumps you use to create flow in your aquarium, none come close to just how strong real currents are on real reefs. "CapFusion" CapeFussion...@hotmail.., com wrote in message ... "Justin Boucher" wrote in message ... I was curious to know how many people out there reduce the current flow in their tanks to simulate calmer night oceans? I have a 240 FOWLR and although there are good hiding spots in the LR for the fish to sleep in, I'm afraid that once the tank is fully stocked, sleeping arrangements will be quite tight. Also, fish size plays a part. I'm aiming at Butterflies and Angels which get rather large. Currently I have ~2000gph returned through two sea swirls 24/7. No other water movement in the tank. Just the Sea Swirls rotating the returned water around. I do not try to simulate clam night. I have several pumps. One main [Mag 12] pump to keep the current 24/7 for 100USG. There will alway be water return from the sump and refugium. The others in the tank can be off or on which depend on my mood or whatever the reason. One main thing you need to take note is - try not to have dead-spot from anywhere in the tank. CapFusion,... |
#6
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I have made a similar number of dives in the Caribbean, and I have found
that currents were much lower at night, especially in shallower water. I don't know if this is worth simulating, but it does drop off. "ReeFeR_MaN" wrote in message ... There is no case for lower night time flow in aquaria, I have logged 272 night dives and the currents are the same as in the day, yes there are variations, but non more so than during the day. Regardless of what water propulsion pumps you use to create flow in your aquarium, none come close to just how strong real currents are on real reefs. "CapFusion" CapeFussion...@hotmail.., com wrote in message ... "Justin Boucher" wrote in message ... I was curious to know how many people out there reduce the current flow in their tanks to simulate calmer night oceans? I have a 240 FOWLR and although there are good hiding spots in the LR for the fish to sleep in, I'm afraid that once the tank is fully stocked, sleeping arrangements will be quite tight. Also, fish size plays a part. I'm aiming at Butterflies and Angels which get rather large. Currently I have ~2000gph returned through two sea swirls 24/7. No other water movement in the tank. Just the Sea Swirls rotating the returned water around. I do not try to simulate clam night. I have several pumps. One main [Mag 12] pump to keep the current 24/7 for 100USG. There will alway be water return from the sump and refugium. The others in the tank can be off or on which depend on my mood or whatever the reason. One main thing you need to take note is - try not to have dead-spot from anywhere in the tank. CapFusion,... |
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