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SuperFudge
06-14-2002, 12:23 AM
Anybody else`s tank hit 87 today?? :eek:

Whooaaa....it was a cooker out here!

I got some A/C and a real fan on that puppy now! ;)

Marc.

[ 13 June 2002, 20:24: Message edited by: Superfudge ]

Troy F
06-14-2002, 12:32 AM
Hey Marc, it's hot here too, the tank is at 82F without MH on (heaters set for 78F) and it's 89F in the room. I'm dyin' here.

Anybody have a pool? Reefclub pool party? C'mon. Naesco has a 500gal tank maybe he'd let me go for a dip.

DJ88
06-14-2002, 12:49 AM
85 here before I turned the 12" house fan on the sump. sitting at 80 now.. Don't know how hot it is in the apt tho.. just hot.. mmm pool..

StirCrazy
06-14-2002, 01:25 AM
my house is 79 (at 9pm) my tank is 83.4 so up 1.4 from normal, I did unplug the heater frm my hot tub last week.. hmm maby a dip in the cold tub :D :D

Steve

Samw
06-14-2002, 02:05 AM
I have a small fan blowing above the tank with PC Lights on all day.

When I got back at 9pm, it was 29C (84F).

[ 13 June 2002, 22:06: Message edited by: Sam W ]

christyf5
06-14-2002, 02:14 AM
Man am I ever glad I have my tank in the basement. Its a cool 74 down here :D

ruck'n'reefer
06-14-2002, 02:18 AM
I unplugged my heaters last night (tank was 84 yesterday). My temp was 80 today with a large house fan on the sump. Getting scary!

[ 13 June 2002, 23:14: Message edited by: Ruck'n'reefer ]

Shadetree
06-14-2002, 03:13 AM
I hear you Marc, a quick check when I got home revealed 87.1 :eek:
The fans are out and the lighting period adjusted. It is a little shorter and goes later so that the lights are on more during the night when it is cooler and I am home and comfortable with all the fans running.

Scott

BCReefer
06-14-2002, 12:07 PM
Temp hit over 85 yesterday so I turned off the lights 2 hours earlier. picking up a fan today to use in cooling it down more. if it does go up tonight again I will be adding some ice cubes.

reefburnaby
06-14-2002, 12:30 PM
Hi,

83F on my tank at 9PM. Should cool down today...I hope. No fans yet...

- Victor.

Doug
06-14-2002, 07:07 PM
And here I thought I had problems trying to keep mine up at 79. I have to cover it to keep the heat in. :D :D

Samw
06-14-2002, 10:20 PM
How long is this good for? An hour, 2 hours?

What about those blue coolant paks or whatever they are called that are used in coolers? Would they last longer?

Originally posted by canadawest:
Hey Patrick, and others, here is a great cooling trick I learned last summer during the heat wave when I didn't have any canopy fans.

Take two empty 2L pop bottles, remove the labels and fill them with water until they are almost full (leave some room). Cap them and put them in your freezer overnight to make a big 2L popsicle. Now when you have high tank temps just float one of the frozen bottles in the tank to help lower the temp. :cool:

With this method you are not melting fresh water in the tank. Also, by having two bottles, you can rotate them, one floating, one freezing. smile.gif <font size="2" face="Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif">

[ 14 June 2002, 20:10: Message edited by: Sam W ]

canadawest
06-15-2002, 01:58 AM
I found that they would help control the temp for about 2-3 hours, which is usually all you need during the peak lighting hours.

Not sure about other solutions, but with the 2L bottles being so thick, I would think they would cool longer than a thin ice pack?

Samw
06-15-2002, 02:41 AM
Originally posted by canadawest:


Not sure about other solutions, but with the 2L bottles being so thick, I would think they would cool longer than a thin ice pack?<font size="2" face="Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif">Was just searching the net for ice replacement/coolants. This graph looks interesting. I don't know how big their "bag of ice" is though.

In terms of the small size of ice packs. I was just thinking of opening up the packs and filling the 2L bottle with the coolant. This should make it last longer than 2L bottle of water.

http://www.techniice.com/html/1smart.htm

http://www.techniice.com/html/images/im_graph_lge.gif

[ 14 June 2002, 22:43: Message edited by: Sam W ]

canadawest
06-15-2002, 04:17 AM
My tank peaked at 83.9F with the MH on for 7 hours. Both canopy fans have been running at their full 12V flow, as opposed to the normal half speed (6V) that I usually run them at when the MH is on.

Normal temp is 79F at night 81F during the day with the MH on, so only 2 degrees above normal. Good news is the temp swing has caused my Bangaiis to spawn again! LOL

Room temp reached 88F by late evening.

Canopy fans are doing their job perfectly! I'm really happy that I added them. :D

Damn it was a hot one yesterday. Outside thermometer read 33C (91F) in the shade!

canadawest
06-15-2002, 04:25 AM
Originally posted by BCReefer:
Temp hit over 85 yesterday so I turned off the lights 2 hours earlier. picking up a fan today to use in cooling it down more. if it does go up tonight again I will be adding some ice cubes.<font size="2" face="Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif">Hey Patrick, and others, here is a great cooling trick I learned last summer during the heat wave when I didn't have any canopy fans.

Take two empty 2L pop bottles, remove the labels and fill them with water until they are almost full (leave some room). Cap them and put them in your freezer overnight to make a big 2L popsicle. Now when you have high tank temps just float one of the frozen bottles in the tank to help lower the temp. :cool:

With this method you are not melting fresh water in the tank. Also, by having two bottles, you can rotate them, one floating, one freezing. smile.gif

stephane
06-15-2002, 10:58 AM
This is an ID of someting Im prety shure will work
great but have not try it yet if someone want a permanent chiler for 20$ it could be a way to go
I will call it the "Stephchiler" :D

http://www.reefcentral.com/vbulletin/showthread.php?s=&threadid=80764&highlight=coroplast

Delphinus
06-15-2002, 02:08 PM
Hi ... just my $0.02 ... "techni-ice" and/or gel packs may last longer and that's great, but what is that stuff? If a pop bottle with frozen water leaks some "coolant" into my tank, it's only fresh water so no catastrophe (presumably). Just be very careful when using the other stuff. I think if it were my tank, I'd just stick with frozen water. Too many things can/eventually do go wrong, why chance leaking some petrochemical (or whatever it is) into the tank?

ron101
06-17-2002, 12:50 AM
Ditto, Murphy's law seems to hold very well for reef tanks. "If it can happen it will happen". Sticking with plain old water would be my choice.