To glass top, or not to glass top...

scottkel

Member
I have a question in regards to glass tops for the tank... I am currently using glass tops on my tank, but it seems like a lot of people do not.

Is there a prefered way here?

Also, i have an enclosed canopy with three doors in the front and its pretty open in the back. If i remove the glass tops, will i have an issue with the water heating up more than if i had the tops on?

Thanks!

Scott
 
I use glass tops just because it seems to help keep the evaporation down some but i do not have a canopy. I think it is pretty much just what look you wanna go for.
 
Scott - I'd say there are a couple of big motivations for removing glass tops (especially for reef tanks)...

The biggest is light. It may not seem like it, but even really clean glass will reflect an appreciable amount of light (and so will the water surface). Add some salt creep and dust onto the glass and you're looking at a really significant reduction. Most people don't want to pay to produce light that isn't getting into the tanks and most reef critters need the light...

Gas exchange is another. The reason evaporation goes down with tops is because the humid air gets trapped above the water surface and under the glass. This also means that less fresh air is able to get to the water surface and CO2 produced by the animals in the tank likewise cannot escape as easily. In many freshwater systems dissolved CO2 is a good thing because bad algae growth is less of a problem (less light) and many people are actually trying to grow algaes and plants (planted tanks). If you have a skimmer, plenty of flow, and/or an open sump this might be a non-issue... but it is one reason to go topless.

As far as your worry about heat, if your top has an open back I'd actually expect a decrease in temperature. By allowing the water to evaporate out of the tank and escape the hood, your water temp should go down not up. Usually glass tops kind of act like a greenhouse, which are intended to trap heat and humidity.

The one thing I'd watch with taking the tops off is to guard against jumpers. In most cases, a bit of gutter guard across the back will make sure none of the fish can get behind the tank.
 
Thanks for your responses..

If i were to decide to take off the glass, do you think i should do it slowly? If I am blocking that much light now, will it shock my system if I remove all glass at once?

Scott
 
I've not had huge problems with light acclimation, so I'd just yank them, but if you have a few corals that you think might not handle the additional light very well, moving them down a little bit in the tank should solve that.

I know crumbletop uses layers of screen to slowly acclimate corals when he has increased his lighting in the past and that might not hurt.

I don't want to overstate the amount of light that the glass is blocking... it shouldn't be a HUGE amount (like 40%) unless your glass is really dirty, so I'm not sure they'll have trouble acclimating on their own unless a coral is already "pushed to its limit."
 
Thanks Brian - I may just "yank them" and see how they respond. I also have to 4" fans in the canopy so this should help with the heat as well... i had them just moving the hot air around that was caused from lighting/glass tops. With the moving air now being across the water, this should help cool as well wouldnt you think?

Scott
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=13463967#post13463967 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by scottkel
With the moving air now being across the water, this should help cool as well wouldnt you think?

That'd be my guess... particularly if the fans are pulling air from outside of the hood. If they are just circulating the air around inside of the canopy, you might not get as much cooling, but either way I'd guess your tank temp will drop.

One thing... you do have shields on those DE lights, right? Those bulbs put off UV, which I think you still need to filter out...
 
Yes Brian - I have UV sheilds on the DE fixtures...

As for the fans - i have them mounted to the back over the canopy, where it is open in the back blowing into the canopy. There is about 3-4 inches between the fans and the wall so i should be bringing in outside air.

Fanof49ASU - thats another concern - the jumping of the fish...

Scott
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=13468663#post13468663 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by scottkel
Fanof49ASU - thats another concern - the jumping of the fish...

Scott

I never thought a clownfish was much of a jumper, until I found it on my desktop. I'd imagine most fish are prone to this at some point.
 
I needed to remove my glass top because my tank was too hot in summer. I needed evaporative cooling. Be ready to top off more frequently.
 
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