Summer Heat

Summer Heat

  • Chillers

    Votes: 20 35.7%
  • Fans

    Votes: 31 55.4%
  • Ice in bottle

    Votes: 2 3.6%
  • other method(please mention in your post)

    Votes: 3 5.4%

  • Total voters
    56

Hwang

New member
I was thinking. Its pretty hot these days and maybe I should start worrying. I've let my tank fluctuate temperature for the past year and even took out my thermometer because there was nothing I would do if it gets too hot anyways.

My question is would corals die instantly if it reaches a certain temperature? or would i be able to reverse the effects if i see them stressed?
 
Some softies will melt pretty quick if it's gets hot. Don't know at what temp for sure but it happened to a buddies nano a few years ago. My tank never goes above 80 and nothing seems to care at that temp
 
mine are lit by LEDS but recently, the tank seems a little hot. (I temperature test by sticking my finger in the water)
 
You can't have temp swings over a couple degree. Some corals will die quick with heat swings other will stress and die later or just miss color. Some you can get the color back if your water and light are good but if your worried about temp swings then you probably can't get gem to color. Up.
 
I use a combination of the house AC, fans (on an APEX controller) as the only cooling. The tank moves between 78.5 and 80.0 (night/day) for the last three or four months according to my apex.

I have kept tanks at 82f for extended periods of time and everything grew great.

The things to worry about with heat are:
- less Oxygen in the water (if a power outage happens on a hot day, having the tank already at 83 is not going to be good, especially in a well stocked tank.
- As mentioned, large temp swings can be devastating.
 
I have to use a chiller. We dont have central AC and Riverside gets really hot (over 100F today) and my 150G got up to 85F. There is no AC in that room either so it's as hot in that room as it is outside.
 
Fans and central a/c. My tank has 85 for a whole summer with no problems. Chillers=propaganda
 
Fans and central a/c. My tank has 85 for a whole summer with no problems. Chillers=propaganda

+1 lol. I use fans and the tank doesn't break 80-82. Temp is normally 79-80Timer has failed before and it's hit 88-I lost a tricolor, millie and a setosa. Softies, yumas, acans & various sps survived. I now have two fans on two timers.
 
Temperature is always a hot debate... Some people have been very successful keeping their tanks as low as 76F (seems low to me) and others have also had no problems keeping their tanks as high as 86F (seems high to me).

The people on @ 76F claim that too high of temperatures limit oxygen levels in the water and that both bleaching STN/RTN are more also linked to temperature. This may or may not be a totally validated argument. but the only time i have ever had a coral STN/RTN was during summer, i had multiple problems and couldn't target the exact causes.

The people @ 86F have provided evidence that many reefs around the world rotinely reach temps well beyond 86F and the oxygen saturation level isnt really an issue. as they explain it fish adapt to their environment like humans, sure its hot the first time you go to Hawaii but if you live there long enough you need a sweater on 75F+ nights. Meaning that fish don't maintain a faster metabolism and so on based on temp. They also claim that the oxygen saturation level difference between 10 degrees isnt so drastic, and that even in an overly stocked closed system would mean a 10 to 15 min difference of fish survival with out flow.

well that's what others say. Me, well i have a fan over my sump, and it kicks on at >81.9F and my heaters kick on at < 80.9 in the summer i will turn up my haters to limit the difference a little more as ambient temp heats my tank up to 82.8F (hottest this year) i try to maintain as small of a temp swing as possible. 2-3 degree swing is good 4-5 is pushing it and anything >5 is bad news IME.
 
When I got to my shop this morning at 6:15am it was between 86 and 94 depending on what room. It was 82 outside. No way fans can keep things in a tolerable range.
 
When I got to my shop this morning at 6:15am it was between 86 and 94 depending on what room. It was 82 outside. No way fans can keep things in a tolerable range.

You sure?

I keep a tank in my garage (uninsulated with just some shake and shingles).
the temp in my garage gets up to well over 110 degrees and with a nice fan I can keep my temp around 82.

Maybe in your situation it is tough though since there are multiple tanks and you would need a fan pointed right at each one of them.
 
You sure?

I keep a tank in my garage (uninsulated with just some shake and shingles).
the temp in my garage gets up to well over 110 degrees and with a nice fan I can keep my temp around 82.

Maybe in your situation it is tough though since there are multiple tanks and you would need a fan pointed right at each one of them.

same with me, uninsulated garage. First day I came home the tank had hit 84 when I got home at 6pm, probably hit around 86+ earlier. My corals have lost some polyp extension.

Threw in 2 fans, 1 for the sump and 1 for the display. Temps were 81 the past 2 days when I returned, wish I knew what it hit during the daytime. Sump fan starts from 8am-6pm, display fan 11am-11pm, evaping 4 gallons of water daily
 
You sure?

I keep a tank in my garage (uninsulated with just some shake and shingles).
the temp in my garage gets up to well over 110 degrees and with a nice fan I can keep my temp around 82.

Maybe in your situation it is tough though since there are multiple tanks and you would need a fan pointed right at each one of them.

Same here. My garage will hit almost 95 to 100 depending in the late afternoon if a hot car is parked inside and I'm still able to keep my tank temp around 82 with one Vornado fan on high speed.

Fans has to work harder now because of the humidity we have with this heat. If the humidity was lower fans will perform more efficiently.
 
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Chiller keeps my system temp in check... but sometimes Valley heat can be brutal and I have to float ziploc bags loaded with ice on the sump to help cool it down a notch.
 
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