Archive for May 2009

Do you have a chiller in your nano?

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IceProbe Aquarium/Water Chiller by Coolworks

IceProbe ChillerCoolWorks’ IceProbe Small Aquarium Chiller (IPAC-50W) is the perfect cooling solution for small aquariums and insulated fish egg hatching, bait, and specimen tanks.

* 50 Watts of cooling power
* Compact size
* Easy bulkhead installation
* Quiet, efficient & reliable
* Optional temperature controller
* 120V

IceProbe Chiller Dimensions
The Aquarium Chiller is a complete water cooling system. It includes the IceProbe, the nut and silicon washer for bulkhead installation, and a power converter with six foot cords on each side. The Aquarium Chiller can be easily installed in any orientation through a 1.25 inch hole into siphon overflows, pre-filters, sumps, or aquarium walls, or suspended with a bracket or lid over the top of the aquarium.

The chiller cools continuously when powered. In most aquarium implementations, the CoolWorks Proportional Temperature Controller is added to regulate the IceProbe’s cooling power. TEC-65 controller is designed for tropical water aquarium environments, with an adjustable temperature range of 65ºF to 85ºF.

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Do you use a protein skimmer in your nano?

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Fish o' the day | Queen Triggerfish

Balistes vetula, also known as the queen triggerfish, is a reef dwelling fish of the Atlantic Ocean. It is occasionally caught as a gamefish, and sometimes kept in marine aquariums.

Appearance
It is a large fish that reaches 60cm in length. It is typically brown with blue lines on its fins and head.

In the aquarium

As one of the largest and most aggressive of the triggerfish, this fish is rarely a good choice as a resident in a marine aquarium. It is however a hardy fish for those who can provide it with a proper environment. Because it grows so large and so quickly the ideal aquarium for this fish is a 500 gallon aquarium, although some sources argue they can be kept is as little as a 125 gallon aquarium when it achieves its adult size of two feet it is unlikely to thrive.

Its diet consists of invertebrates. In aquariums shrimp, squid, clams, octopus, scallops, and crab are all good choices of food.

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Text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.

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CPR Aquatic SR3 Protein Skimmer

 Ok so I finally threw in the towel on the oceanic biocube skimmer.  That thing was just not helping me at all.  So I bought a refurb of the CPR SR3 on ebay a couple weeks ago for 89 bucks.  It finally came and I hooked it up.  It took a little messing with to get it going but its been running for a week now and it is definitely pulling out more gunk from my water than the oceanic one was.  The oceanic skimmer cup usually looked like it had light tea colored water in it.  I emptied out the cup of the SR3 the other day after about 3 days and there was about a half inch worth of this very very dark green water.  I was amazed. 

As far as the setup goes I didn’t follow the directions exactly because when I did my tank filled up with bubbles.  Instead of taking the false floor out of chamber 2 I put the skimmer on top of it.  This way I can keep the water level higher in chamber2 and the flow of the water coming out of skimmer is must less crazy because the water coming in from chamber 1 is not pounding on it anymore.

 The only issue I have with it so far is the noise.  It is pretty loud and I cant seem to find a way to quiet it down without drastically losing the amount of bubbles it produces. 

Either way for about 30 bucks more than the oceanic skimmer it was a great buy.  I think you can grab one new for around 150-200 bucks.  I would check ebay.  I lucked out on this one.

If anyone has one too please let us know your experience with it.

Here are some of the spec on this skimmer:

  • Includes side mounted venturi pump to fit into confined spaces.
  • Dual return chamber and underwater return to effectively remove excess bubbles.
  • Simple skimmer adjustment using CPR’s collection cup assembly and O-ring support.
  •  Easily slides inside of the Oceanic BioCube 29 sump area; fits in the middle chamber of the sump section of the BioCube 29 without any modifications. The lid closes as originally manufactured and the collection cup can be easily removed for cleaning through the rear access hatch.
  • -Dimensions 8 5/8″L x 2 7/8″W x 14 3/8″H
    -19″H needed to remove collection cup.

more at www.cpraquatic.com

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Deep Sandbed vs. BareBottom in your Nano

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