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View Full Version : DIY Tank covers that don't cut out light?


asylumdown
03-15-2010, 08:47 PM
I've read a bunch of forums looking for suggestions on tank covers and I'm wondering if anyone has a novel idea I haven't heard of yet. I have 2x250 watts of 10 000k metal halide and 250watts of actinic lighting in a fixture that sits on top of the tank with maybe 5-6 inches of clearance to the surface of the water. The very first wrasse I ever got lasted all of a day before it launched itself to it's doom while I was at work so I built a nylon cover netting cover. My second wrasse, a lineatus, managed to sail through it as though it wasn't even there (he was either very strong or very unlucky) when I was in Palm Springs. I then replaced him with mystery wrasse, which had tail and fin rot. I spent over a week putting hours of daily effort in to that guy getting him well in a hospital tank and 2 days ago he went in to the display. This time, I used white egg crate to make a firmly fitted cover for the whole tank with holes for equipment cut to exactly snug dimensions. Leave it to my luck to have him leap out unnoticed as I was doing a full clean of the glass and water change and not notice as he died on the floor 2 feet from me. You could still see the wet marks where he had bounced around on the floor when I noticed him.

That. Truly. Sucked.

Anyway, I have noticed a visible difference in the amount of light hitting the sand with the cover and without. it's most noticeable in the corners of the tank as the MH bulbs are relatively centred in the fixture. I have a soft spot for wrasses - they are by far my favourite fish and I would very much like to replace either my fairy or lineatus wrasse but I don't want to compromise the light getting to my corals (I have tons of sps that have been doing incredibly well, I'm afraid to change that). Does anyone have a novel solution that can be made to fit without either cooking my tank, looking terrible or dramatically impacting the light?

ScubaSteve
03-15-2010, 09:38 PM
Tagging along on this one. Same problem here. I don't want to cover the tank with glass as I am bordering heat issue territory as it is and I find meshes cut my light too much. I've been debating making some sort of mesh "wall" from my tank to the fixture that somehow doesn't look terrible.

bvlester
03-15-2010, 10:46 PM
Use glass over the center 2/3s of the tank and fit eggcrate over the rest. works realy well as long as you clean the glass atleast once a week, micro fiber cloths work realy good at this. wash with water and viniger then then rinse with water and this is where you use a micro fiber cloth. works well for me. figured this one out because I have a 5 foot tank and only a four foot light. This way air circulates still because both ends are open you don't even get much condensation happening.

Bill

banditpowdercoat
03-15-2010, 10:49 PM
Only true thing that won't block light is nothing Make a canopy, nothing in the way, but side up, fish can't jump out

monocus
03-15-2010, 10:51 PM
build an open box with a light mesh over the top,with hinged access doors.support the middle with a 1x3

Carmen
03-16-2010, 03:48 AM
I built this cover with "bird netting" and I really do not see any reduction in light getting through. It's not 100% jump proof but it stops most. The smaller ones could still squeeze through if they aimed just right! It's 1" squares I think.
http://i355.photobucket.com/albums/r474/ctash_album/2010_0209Feb2010Tank0045.jpg

asylumdown
03-16-2010, 05:28 PM
wicked, thanks! Perfect weekend project while my partner is out of town :)

Black Phantom
03-18-2010, 11:16 PM
Carmen

What did you use as a border to support the mesh?

TJSlayer
03-18-2010, 11:17 PM
The plastic frame kits that you get at home depot or rona for building window screens by the looks of it..

Bloodasp
03-19-2010, 12:04 AM
I found mine at canadian tire, I'm pretty sure home depot would have one too.
http://www.canadiantire.ca/AST/browse/3/HouseHome/HomeRepairMaintenance/ScreenDoorRepair/PRD~0464016P/Saint-Gobain%252BComplete%252BScreen%252BKit.jsp