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04/15/2009, 06:38 PM | #1 |
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Techniques for water changes
Sorry for the extremely newbie question, but can you guys explain how you do your water changes? I need everything spelled out. Here's what I imagine:
1) Turn off all pumps, skimmers. 2) Take a syphon or pump with tubing and suck out old water? Can this be done from the sump? 3) Syphon new water back into the sump? 4) Turn everything on. Is this the basic process? |
04/15/2009, 06:44 PM | #2 |
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Yes, and yes you should pull from sump.
My sump is in the basement. I shut all off. drain out 15 gallons every week and then replace with 15g salt water. Flip pumps back on. My system pumps out to an Ocean CLear filter so not to much stir up in the tank.
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Everything is Good with Moderation. Current Tank Info: 150 Gal Oceanic, 30g Sump, Gen-X PCX-150 2250 gph, Red Sea Clasic Turbo Skimmer, 18w Turbo Twist UV, Ocean Clear Filter w/live rock, Several Buckets, |
04/15/2009, 06:47 PM | #3 |
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Can you explain your last sentence better? I don't understand how taking water out of the sump would stir up your tank...
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04/15/2009, 07:08 PM | #4 |
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When my pump turns back on the water returns through a Ocean Clear filter with rock rubble in it. When the pumps kick on there is a rush of water pressure. So omit my last sentence. This refers to my tank only.
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Everything is Good with Moderation. Current Tank Info: 150 Gal Oceanic, 30g Sump, Gen-X PCX-150 2250 gph, Red Sea Clasic Turbo Skimmer, 18w Turbo Twist UV, Ocean Clear Filter w/live rock, Several Buckets, |
04/15/2009, 07:17 PM | #5 |
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snewcrash - your procedure is good
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http://www.reefcentral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=2534403 Current Tank Info: 225 gal Reef, 60 gal reef & 40b frag tank |
04/15/2009, 07:19 PM | #6 |
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Just another option b/c your sig doesn't mention how big your sump is. Mine doesn't hold enough water for a 10% water change, so I pull from my main tank. I turn off all pumps etc, then siphon off the main tank and pump back into the main tank. I end up briefly exposing corals on the top and also snails who've climbed to the top, with no problems.
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"Challenges forge the greatness in you" Current Tank Info: 180gal softy reef (Apr '09) |
04/15/2009, 07:20 PM | #7 | |
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Quote:
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04/15/2009, 07:23 PM | #8 | |
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Quote:
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"Challenges forge the greatness in you" Current Tank Info: 180gal softy reef (Apr '09) |
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04/15/2009, 07:34 PM | #9 |
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Thanks for the help!
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04/15/2009, 07:58 PM | #10 |
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More info here:
How to Change Water in Your Reef Aquarium http://reefkeeping.com/issues/2007-11/nftt/index.php |
04/15/2009, 09:09 PM | #12 |
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My sump is on the basement floor to aid w/ cooling so I use a shop-vac to syphon the detritus from the bottom. It works great! Only pitfall is I can only do 10 - 15 gal. at a time.
I sometimes change 50 gal at a time so I use a maxijet w/ some vinyl hose to pump out most of the water before using the shop-vac. I then pump back in the new water w/ the same maxijet. 10 min. job! |
04/15/2009, 09:11 PM | #13 |
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If you cahnge out a sumps worth, you can even bring the replacement water up to temp after you pump it into the sump.
I keep the vor-techs running while the main return pump is off for the change. The fish never know it happened! |
04/16/2009, 11:02 AM | #14 |
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The process varies from person to person - usually depending upon tank location with respect to your main plumbing.
I have a sub-basement (half stairwell) near the tank. This is where I mix the replacement water. I use a maxjet1200 to bring the water to the sump - and run a siphon from the main tank to a bathroom on the main floor. this means that I am adding and removing at the same time. I can throttle the levels in the tank by stopping the drain siphon. At the end, I overfill the sump a bit then siphon out the extra to the regular "full " line on the sump. Unless it is an emergency, mix the water up ahead of time. Run a powerhead in the container and bring up to temperature. My method continuously mixes the new water with the old - minimizing any shock - but it is still a good idea as this will stabilize the new water.
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call me "w" - easier to remember Current Tank Info: 125g All Glass rr, 50g sump/fuge, RKE, T5 Retrofit Lights, Deltec Turbo Skimmer, PM Kalk Reactor |
04/16/2009, 08:42 PM | #15 |
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Mixing water in advance
How far in advance should I mix water? 1 day or 2 days is enough? My sum is small I have to take water from both the display and the sum.
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04/16/2009, 09:07 PM | #16 |
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I'm guessing you mean sump when you say sum. Did you read the article yet? 24 hours is a good rule.
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04/16/2009, 09:59 PM | #17 | |
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Quote:
I just use a 3/4 inch hose to due water changes. Siphan it out and put it back in with a mag 7 pump. |
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04/20/2009, 02:06 AM | #18 |
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i have two identical small pumps, one in the saltwater bin (feeding sump)
and one in the sump (feeding into the waste bin). they are plugged into an intermatic timer controller with two outlets. the timer is on for 3 minutes per day (effectively doing a 4gal water change daily). (this is on a 250gal volume.) of course, this can be varied to run longer less frequently. or manually if you prefer. |
04/20/2009, 06:32 AM | #19 |
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Easiest method
Hire some one else to do it Also the most expensive method |
04/20/2009, 07:12 AM | #20 |
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I would recommend a cheap submersible pump or powerhead. Secure it to some flexible tubing from home depot with a few zip ties and you your never have to suck or even touch the water. It's portable and works both ways (water in/water out) and can be left running in the tub your mixing!
The only down side is if you want to clean detritus from the cracks it can be a pain. But for simple water movement...let a pump do it. I have an old dolphin pump setup like I said that pumps RO to my mix tub, but I can use it anywhere I want. All my other stuff is on drains and pumps too. All my water changes are done without me touchnig or even LIFTING any water.
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--Fizz Current Tank Info: Current system is 8x2x2 240g peninsula setup with a single "chamber" 100g sump in the basement with an RDSB. All corals are 100% home grown from frags of fellow reefers (low natural reef impact). Last edited by Fizz71; 04/20/2009 at 07:18 AM. |
04/20/2009, 07:30 AM | #21 | |
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