Post Heater Failure RECOVERY TIPS 4 FISH

LauraGreenImp

New member
So, yesterday, my neighbor (co-owner lfs, my sensei) and I installed a brand new 500w Titanium heater in my system.

It failed. My tank temp went from 78F to 65F overnight.

Hubs, neighbor, & I pulled new H out abt 6am my time, I've got some loaners stuck in my sump, and temp is now (1pm my time) 72.7F. Loaners are set to max out at 76F.

At this point, my Hippo T & Foxface have *finally* come out of hiding, and all the other creatures are mobile. Corals and Polyps look good.

BUT. My Diamond Goby has yet to appear. (he's my secret favorite)

Any tips, advice? Should I feed something special?

I feel like I'm shouting into the wind here, since this is probably just a "˜hurry up and wait' situation, but I'd be grateful for any suggestions! :headwally:
 
Going low like that is FAR better than it overheating and cooking everything so you are fine....
Just give it time.. No real need to hurry.. Just let the tank heat up and good to go..
Relax.. its all fine..
 
The fish will probably be fine. I've seen fish shipped get colder than that.

On another note, why do you let your house get that cold?
 
Yay! The Diamond Goby is back on the job, doing the *very* important task of moving every grain of sand from one end of the tank to the other. My temp is is 75.6F.

And to answer your question...

Hubs & I are both crazy and ‘cold-natured’. We leave our heat on 55F all winter, keep all the windows open (even at night), and use a fireplace (mainly for ambiance). Thus, the $$$ we’ve put into tank heaters! lol
 
We keep our house at 66. I don't like overheat.

Just for info, 62.8 degrees is the temperature at which things start to die. I learned that in an 8-day power-out in a winter storm.
 
We keep our house at 66. I don't like overheat.

Just for info, 62.8 degrees is the temperature at which things start to die. I learned that in an 8-day power-out in a winter storm.

BRRRRR......lesson learned from hurricanes....I'll never be without a generator again, best $1,100 I've ever spent...Honda EU2000i Inverter Generator, super quiet, super efficient, runs 2 tanks, refrig & 1 TV LOL
 
We keep our house at 66. I don't like overheat.

Just for info, 62.8 degrees is the temperature at which things start to die. I learned that in an 8-day power-out in a winter storm.

I've never checked the ambient temperature of our house before. It's 65.4F. I like things cold, but I'm a retired MRItech, and I'm used to spending long hours in cold, dark rooms! Hubs is computer engineer, so... :love2:

So - 62.8F is the death temp for tank? Or for ambient room temp? Our house has gotten colder inside than that (I only know this bc my nephews complained & I made them measure) and the tank heaters did their job. The new 500w heater was purchased to do a better job.

In summer, we also keep windows open, and blast AC. The ambient temp surrounding our tank probably fluctuates a lot. We monitor the tank temp pretty closely. 4yrs ago a heater went *up* & it was deadly. In the near future we're getting (probably - I'm open to other suggestions) an Apex jr to monitor things better.
 
When I get around to my new setup. I'm going to have 2 heaters. This way you can double your chances of at least one of them overheating or not working.... lol.
I bought an external device that monitors tank temp and kills the power to the heater if it goes above normal temp. Maybe made by Inkbird? Read about it on here.
 
I have kinda settled on apex jr (always open to other's opinions, but would appreciate their reasons) bc following reasons:

My neighbor, who has many yrs X in SW, uses apex and is a huge help + only 3 houses down. :)

I'd like to eventually scale up to the "˜big girl' apex, figure it will be a shorter learning curve if I stick to one brand.

We're going to drop cables from our router for both TVs, and will drop c to connect to a jr at same time (May 1st), not sure if we can do this w inkbird or ranco (keeping in mind we're going to upgrade apex in 1 - 2 yrs).

I'm willing to entertain arguments (the polite kind) to the contrary!


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I am 6 months into the hobby (after 30yrs freshwater) and the first thing I put in place was 2 heaters. They are simply the most likely piece of equipment to fail IMHO.
 
I am 6 months into the hobby (after 30yrs freshwater) and the first thing I put in place was 2 heaters. They are simply the most likely piece of equipment to fail IMHO.

After much discussion, hubs & I have also decided to go w 2 heaters. Just the most reasonable thing to do. [we STILL have loaner heaters bc: life]
 
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