Hi all,
I'm very new to the hobby, tank is setup and rock is curing. I'm taking the time now to figure out all the faults in my system before cycling and adding any fish/coral. I have a Reefer 170 and a 100w cobalt heater horizontally in the sump. I've learned as the nights get colder and my office windows are open (I'm a smoker so this is a requirement lest my wife get ****ed) that it clearly wasn't enough to heat the tank. I bought a 300w titanium heater to be monitored by my ReefKeeper lite (heater requires a controller; no "on-board" monitoring). In it's in instructions it suggests putting the heater in the overflow vs the sump based on varying water levels. My concern with this is with a 300w heater in the overflow, is there is a possibility it could melt the overflow pipe, or worse, the return pipe and start spraying water everywhere.
So my question is where do you have your heater? Have you found success in the overflow with no risk of damage to drains and returns? Or do you just keep the heater low enough in the sump so if there is a low water level, it's still below the baffles and not a concern.
Thanks!
Zach
I'm very new to the hobby, tank is setup and rock is curing. I'm taking the time now to figure out all the faults in my system before cycling and adding any fish/coral. I have a Reefer 170 and a 100w cobalt heater horizontally in the sump. I've learned as the nights get colder and my office windows are open (I'm a smoker so this is a requirement lest my wife get ****ed) that it clearly wasn't enough to heat the tank. I bought a 300w titanium heater to be monitored by my ReefKeeper lite (heater requires a controller; no "on-board" monitoring). In it's in instructions it suggests putting the heater in the overflow vs the sump based on varying water levels. My concern with this is with a 300w heater in the overflow, is there is a possibility it could melt the overflow pipe, or worse, the return pipe and start spraying water everywhere.
So my question is where do you have your heater? Have you found success in the overflow with no risk of damage to drains and returns? Or do you just keep the heater low enough in the sump so if there is a low water level, it's still below the baffles and not a concern.
Thanks!
Zach