flower
Well-Known Member
Quote:
Originally Posted by asp762 http:///t/392546/my-55-gallon-adventure/40#post_3489495
Yeah that's what I mean. The one heater was almost never off. It stayed on even when I placed it on 70F. It's a 65 watt, and it didn't do any harm.
I keep the AC on in order to counter the heat from the two 250 watt Metal Halides and two T5s.
Since I removed the faulty heater, my temp has come down by a noticeable amount and stays at 77-78F.
You may not even need a heater. You can't run the AC in the winter to counteract the MHs...putting a fan blowing on the water surface will blow some of the heat away from the tank...a clip on fan will work great for an emergency cool down. You can get smaller fans...one to push cool air in, and another to pull hot air from the tank. Raising the MHs higher will also help. I have my lights on a pulley system...it also makes messing with the tank breeze.
Originally Posted by asp762 http:///t/392546/my-55-gallon-adventure/40#post_3489495
Yeah that's what I mean. The one heater was almost never off. It stayed on even when I placed it on 70F. It's a 65 watt, and it didn't do any harm.
I keep the AC on in order to counter the heat from the two 250 watt Metal Halides and two T5s.
Since I removed the faulty heater, my temp has come down by a noticeable amount and stays at 77-78F.
You may not even need a heater. You can't run the AC in the winter to counteract the MHs...putting a fan blowing on the water surface will blow some of the heat away from the tank...a clip on fan will work great for an emergency cool down. You can get smaller fans...one to push cool air in, and another to pull hot air from the tank. Raising the MHs higher will also help. I have my lights on a pulley system...it also makes messing with the tank breeze.