Near Disaster

jefft321

New member
Well I got home after work tonight and noticed that sometime during the day my power had gone out. It was back on and I immediately went to check on my aquariums. On my nano reef there was a Major problem, the Finnex Digital Titanium Heater was reading 0, which must have ment 100 degrees! The corals were sliming and the mushrooms had expelled their guts! My Hawkfish was staring at me and leaning on his side! I put my finger in the water and I thought I would get a 1st degree burn! I put in bags of ice and so far things are looking ok at this point. Has anyone else had this problem? How can I prevent it in the future?
- Jeff
 
some people put there thermometers on timers so they can only work for a few minutes out of the day, usually thats all they need anyway.
 
Man! I'm sorry to hear about that.

This sort of thing happens all too often. Just about any heater you can buy is a potential ticking time bomb. There are a few good rules of thumb out there to avoid this kind of thing:
1- Use analog-set heaters as opposed to digital. Yours sounds like it was a digital. I tend to trust analog heaters a lot more because the thermostat is mechanically set and not subject to failures that bad electronic components can experience.
2- Never oversize your heaters. It is better to use two small undersized heaters than it is to use one large heater. Heaters fail, all you can do is mitigate the outcome when that happens.
3- Redundancy. A temperature controller is a great device and will help prevent this sort of thing. The idea is that if one fails (the heater thermostat or the temp controller), the other one will still prevent the tank from over heating.
4- Use open canopies with fans blowing across the water. This is good for many other reasons as well. Evaporative cooling is a powerful thing and might have saved you in this instance. I don't know how practical this sort of thing would have been in your case, depends on the style of tank.

I find it interesting that whenever I read about a heater failure causing a tank crash it has to do with making the tank too hot as opposed to letting it cool too much. I think this is a good indication that people are using too strong of heaters. In my tank during the winter, the heater is on practically all the time. I maintain the temp at about 76. Although this is a bit cool, it is certainly acceptable. The good thing about this is that even if both my temp controller and heater broke and my heater stayed in the on position, I would not be cooking the tank. Now, if the heat in my apartment were to go out, I would probably need to slap another heater in my tank. But, this is a much more manageable and less risky situation than possibly over-heating.
 
Is there a more reliable brand of heater? I use titanium heaters, I have one of them set to 72 degrees and the heat wavers high and low - sometimes as high as 80 degrees. I notice that the tanks don't seem to stay a stable temp.
BTW, the fish and coral look almost back to normal now! I am glad I didn't get home much later.
 
The problem is that this sort of thing has been known to happen with pretty much all brands of heaters. I would definitely stay away from the digital ones, however.
 
Ive always heard that a good idea was too use 2 or 3 heaters that were undersized for the tank, that way if one went bad it couldnt do too much damaged. Definitely heard to stay away from digital ones though.
 
Stable temp is important: the ocean just doesn't change temperature very fast, and most critters just aren't ready for it. If your heat is wavering that much even normally, I would guess that your heater was mismatched to your water volume/room temp to begin with: it's turning on and hitting target temp and switching off the active heat, but then overheating things before it can lose its remaining stored heat.

Unfortunately, while everything may be happier atm, if they got cooked even for a short time there may be long term damage to gills/chemistry/etc. Be very careful over the next few weeks.
 
man that stinks ,, i have a few things you can have to start up again , i have some green sins , pom pom your welcome to ... let me know if you want them

Murph
 
Thanks everyone for their replies, and offers.
I definately am going to switch heaters, it's a shame because I just bought 2 of the Digital Titanium ones!
 
Well, I was about to buy two titanium heaters, so your post could have saved me a similar disaster down the road. Thanks.
 
I would use 2 smaller heaters and a separate temp controller. I would dial in the heaters slightly above the desired temp. Then use the controller to regulate temps.
 
I would highly recommend Ebo Jager Heaters in pairs run by a Ranco Dual Controller. I will control the heat and cool effectively by plugging in a fan or chiller. It can hold temp at nearly +- 1 degree. I agree totally with aninjaatemyshoe decide how many watts you need and divide it by two and then add back in 25%. That should be the appropiate heater size.
 
all heaters suck A temp controller is a great idia for all of us . Allways use 2 or 4 small heaters. hard to do in a nano though. Even suposedly high end heaters fail. I came home one day and had an ebo jager fail and cook my two 8 yr old lion fish. my heater was only 8 months old.
I keep 4 small heaters in my reef all set 1-2 degrees apart. and I replace 2 each year. (The two that are set to the higher temp) then I rotate the other two to higher temps.
 
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