Thinking about doing a seahorse tank. Sence the temp is best 68 to 74 what is a good way to cool the water? A chillier is expensive and makes alot of noise not to metion the energy cost. Any good ideas how to keep a the right temp? Thnaks
When I just had one tank, I used a large floor fan plus a large table type fan both blowing on the tank but temps still got up too high in the peak heat periods.
Now, with a lot of tanks, I have a room air conditioner set up to control it at max. 74°.
i do, i rotate 3 bottles, one in the morning, one in the afternoon, and one at night, been doing this for about 2 weeks now, on hotter days it keeps my tank at 77, on nicer days i can keep it at 74. i use these in a 29 gallon tank
i do, i rotate 3 bottles, one in the morning, one in the afternoon, and one at night, been doing this for about 2 weeks now, on hotter days it keeps my tank at 77, on nicer days i can keep it at 74. i use these in a 29 gallon tank
i have used the frozen bottle method before. it works for a small tank but i think a 50g is too big. the bottles will melt too quickly and the temp. reduction in the tank wont be enough to make it worth it. i would use a fan blowing over the sump or top of the tank if u dont have a sump. you can lower a tank several degrees with this method, just have to top off more. if you had the money u could get a drop in chiller which uses a coil in the actual water to cool the tank.
Also, based on MY past experiences over the last 4+ years, 77° caused me problems and losses.
I know there are tanks out there as warm and warmer, but I'm not prepared to take any more chances when I'm able to control that factor.
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