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#1
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![]() I just found out that I will lose all power to my house between 9am and 3pm. What can I do for my fish and corals? I have a small generator that will allow me to run a very small fan and a air bubbled for maybe 2 hrs. I know this isn't enough.
A few months back I learned a hard lesson turning my tank off to feed my corals. I left it off all night and woke up to 11 fish dead. The timewas approx 6 hrs. This outage is for 6 hours. What can I do?? |
#2
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![]() the 2 basic things you really need to worry about are heat and water movement.
If you can run a heater and a small powerhead (like a koralia), you'll be fine. even a small generator should be okay running these... |
#3
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![]() Leaving everything off for 6 hours is not the same as having some basic things like a few air pumps going to oxygenate the water. What size is your system, generator & what's your current stocking level look like? I have two Pennplax battery operated air pumps on my system permanently in case there's an outage when I'm not around. They will cut in automatically through a small sensing relay in each one. If you're home during the outage there are a number of things you can do to minimize the impact. Remove some water, heat it on a gas stove or bbq if you don't have a gas stove & dump the water back in to keep the temperature up. The splashing will also help oxygenate somewhat. A car battery on a 1000 watt inverter can keep a skimmer or small powerhead going for quite a while as well.
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Mike 77g sumpless SW DIY 10 watt multi-chip LED build ![]() |
#4
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![]() IMO
You dont need to go to those lengths as long as you have a generator and know that the power outage is coming. salt settles when uncirculated, so it's not that your water loses so mch oxygen, it's that the salt settles on the bottom, killing the oxygen there and leaving a very oxygenated, low salinity layer on top. My house loses power a few times a year at least and all I do is run a heater on each of my tanks and a Koralia 1 in each off of a small, 150$ generator. Have never lost a fish on power outages, longest was almost 30 hours winter before last. Go ahead and run back and forth from the barbecue, but its unneccesary if you have a small generator. |
#5
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![]() Current stock is a regal tang, melanurus wrasse, scopa tang, mandarin goby, niger trigger, lawnmower blenny,2 clowns and a nem plus the corals.
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#6
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![]() CDN tire back up battery
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#7
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![]() Necessities in order of importance (IMO):
1. Heater 2. Air pump 3. Small powerhead
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Gary Tank was up for 7yrs and 10months. Thanks Everyone! 2016/2017 180Gallon Build Coming Soon... |
#9
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![]() You make a good point! we get a lot of outages, usually don't last to long, but we do get them. I had never thought of that or what I would do if we got one. Going to have to inquire about that to some fellow fishers.
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#10
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![]() An air pump alone will be enough to keep everything happy for 6 hours. Unless the tank is pretty small heat loss shouldn't be an issue either. Not sure what the fan would be for but I wouldn't use it, a second air pump would be more effective.
Is the power outage in effect now? Is so I'm guessing any advice at this point is fairly useless unless you have access through a smart phone or something. ![]() |