gabew
New member
I am in the process of building my 55gallon cold water aquarium so I am still working out the details. One problem I have been wrestling with is the temperature the tank would need to get down to in the coldest of the winter months. The temperature needs to get down to at least 40 degrees Fahrenheit but preferably it should get all the way down to 36 degrees in February. This is very cold and I would need a very powerful (and VERY expensive) chiller. One way I have thought to solve this problem is using the cold outside to cool the tank. First off obviously if the water is that cold the air is cold too, and yes it is. In February the average outside tamp is around 30degrees here, but in the winter it can get much colder, down to 10 bellow! So anyway my plan would work like this, the tank would be set up near a wall between the tank and outside. Water out of the sump would be pumped outside through a hose that goes outside, which would be coiled several times for maximum cold air contact, then back into the sump. This would run constantly in the winter as well as a chiller. This would hopefully take much strain off the chiller letting my get away with a less powerful and cheaper one.
So that is my plan but I want to make sure it works so have a few questions.
Would this work?
Could the water freeze in the hose?
Could it cool the tank TOO much?
Should I add an emergency heater just in case?
How powerful a pump should I use?
thank you for any helpful information
So that is my plan but I want to make sure it works so have a few questions.
Would this work?
Could the water freeze in the hose?
Could it cool the tank TOO much?
Should I add an emergency heater just in case?
How powerful a pump should I use?
thank you for any helpful information
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