Jump to content

Fisher

Journalists
  • Posts

    641
  • Joined

Everything posted by Fisher

  1. Hey Sprucegruve! I took a spin past here earlier without time to (April Wine) say hello. Nerrtheless, Hello, again (um, the Cars I think). I moved to southern Ontario in 2015; living outside Thunder Bay presently. Slowly making our way back home. We visited our old digs in Tomahawk a while back. The dahlia bulbs you gave my wife to plant were thriving, so the current tenant likely pulls the bulbs in the fall. I forgot if you introduced us to haskap or not... but those survive too! Great to see your posts again. Take care, dan
  2. I was looking into this approach too, sans all the franken-pipe. No bend in the mat, no pore compression. Tweak the angle to maximize water flow through the mat. And we all could use more flow :drunk:
  3. My 1st HMF project was in a 29g tank; a single piece of foam installed on one end. I cut the sheet slightly oversized so the mat was tight, but didn’t bow. Along with the jetlifter, I put the water heater behind the mat too. Two inch spacers along the front and back glass, made of foam trim pieces, ensured the mat wouldn't creep toward the side glass and touch the heater. Obviously, an end HMF reduces swim length of the tank – which was a consideration I hadn’t thought of before. Here's the front view of my 1st 29g HMF. On a small tank, the space the HMF occupies is noticeable. A piece of 2” 30ppi poret is probably rigid enough to span 18", but I wasn’t willing to concede 4” of tank length, even though the next tank I was going to convert is 4 feet long. The corner designs I found require channel on the tank glass to keep the foam in place. Effective, but I didn't want the hassle of draining and drying the tank in order to do it. My intent was to build something I could just drop in. I found these on the weeb. They're made of plastic – couldn’t find them anywhere on our continent last year. The prototype is cobbled together from salvaged aquarium glass; the base is 7” square. I assembled the pieces with silicone sealant – not worried about bond strength because it won’t hold any weight. I am pleased with the cavity size; plenty of room for the jet lifter and heater in there. The silicone bead in the aquarium keeps the corner units ¼” away from the tank glass. Nice space for shrimp to hide. If I were to do it again, I’d make the back corner a 45o profile. To my shame, this has been sitting here empty and dry since we moved to Ontario 9 months ago. It’d be pretty easy to put channel inside the tank to hold the poret now. But I’ve made something that I can take out and exchange for the ol’ canister anytime. Take good care folks.
  4. http://albertaaquatica.com/index.php?showtopic=42869
  5. http://albertaaquatica.com/index.php?showtopic=43759
  6. Took another walk through HD terra losa this morning. CoolWhite are 1600 Lumens Daylight are 1650 Lumens Both are on the shelf for ~$30
  7. I think this is what I saw Phillips LED T8 I'm heading back to the city again tomorrow and take a stroll through the store again. I think it was the location by Terra Losa. edit: only thing is that I'm sure the box said 1650 lumens.... this one is 1600 *shrug*
  8. I was walking through HomeDepot today and spied a 4 foot T8 Linear LED drop in tube. 32W I think, 5000K. Not the same output as T5HO, but it certainly was an unexpected discovery. I, since, read that some of these linears can be used with a quick start - and some require the ballast be bypassed.
  9. I'm not a good resource for sump stuff vimmer. Thought about it. Read about it. No spine to try it. Admire anyone who does So ... you'll have three overflows, at two different heights, running down to the sump then? Seems to me the height difference in overflow lines won't matter. Once the water level reaches an escape route, away it goes. Do you already have a pump arrangement in mind that generates enough head to lift water back up to your tanks at the rate(s) you want?
  10. If I'm picturing your setup correctly, you have 5x10gal (~500lbs of water weight) on the top shelf, 2x10gal+36gal (~560lbs of water weight) on the middle shelf and a 50gal sump (~500lbs water weight) on the bottom shelf (which could also serve as the bottom of the stand. Accounting for glass, substrate et al, each tier must hold *roughly* 600-650lbs or so? Frame each deck with 2x4s on edge - with a single 2x4 down the middle length (maybe a cross brace as you already mentioned) for center support, and you'll have lots of wood to hold the weight. The critical issue I see is how to connect each shelf at the overall height you'll require in order to maintain adequate vertical rigidity. http://albertaaquatica.com/index.php?showtopic=37361 I built my 2 corner cabinets out of 2x3. They are 16 inches shorter than yours. I also wrestled with cross bracing -and- how to connect the top deck to the vertical corners. The process was as rewarding as the result, I'm sure you'll think so too.
  11. Frustrating. Sounds like something you can take up with Charles. His email address is on the good ol' Contact Us page.
  12. Hi Ian. jamesbarr started a thread on Walstad His tank is still running. He would be a good resource for some of your questions Ian. Good for you for giving it a whirl. take good care -Fisher
  13. The boys in the last two photos sure look like M herbertaxelrodi. On the other hand, M trifisciata "Running Creek" can have a yellow/gold hue bracketing the lateral band. Take a look at the 2nd last photo in ranbowric's journal.
  14. Fisher

    Shrimp Id

    They have a solid chestnut brown flank (unlike the bamboo photos I skimmed). Are you talking about body shape or color Claudiohv?
  15. Fisher

    Shrimp Id

    What do you think?
  16. I hope so too Tracy. Ich has a reputation for claiming it's pound of flesh. Preventative measures aside, a timely diagnosis and definitive response is vital. The forum is a resource for many. Please consider giving us (and them) an update - regardless of outcome. Happy Easter -fisher
  17. Hi Tracy. Good for you for thinking though and acting on what's best for your fish. You already have a plan; heat and salt. "Does anyone know if I should add the salt gradually and if so over what time period? Also is that enough salt?" Well, you've already begun to sort this out Tracy! Gradually :thumbs: That can be the difference between acclimating and shocking fish in a new environment. So add the rest or your salt over the course of a few hours, -or- even a day if you really want to, until you reach your target solution. And watch your fish all the while. Is it enough salt? Time will tell. I haven't dealt with Ich in 20yrs. Perhaps someone who has tried treating Ich with salt will chime in. Take good care Tracy. -fisher
  18. Are you more concerned about application or reliability? Making an informed purchase is always a noble cause. The challenge sees to be finding objective information that lets you make the choice yourself. Here are a few AA threads that have reliability as the primary concern. You will certainly find a pile more on the web. Advice before buying a used Eheim Help me chose a canister filter Eheim Canister Leaking Eheim Pro 3 Leakeing I discovered that most filters are good for planted tanks (application). I also discovered that any one brand comes with its set of reliability concerns (which may or may not actually occur). Some problems are the manufacturer's responsibility (which owners will readily share); some problems are the owner's responsibility (which owners will rarely admit). In the end, all filter owners decide to either, manage those risks, or trade one risk for another. *shrug Eheim is long on history and market Lessy78. If Eheim was a lemon, you wouldn't find a favorable report - and LFS wouldn't be too interested in carrying them. But there's lots of info out there on your model that you can read, evaluate and compare to your own experience. Take good care, Fisher
  19. The seller wasn't able to tell me who the importer was. So after 5 straight months of non-stop taxonomy, (and trying to distill the variant photos on planetcatfish), I reckon they're C ambiacus. Their body pattern seems just as bold as C agassizii, but these have a more pronounced mask than C agassizii. The black dorsal spot on C lamberti seems to run mid-dorsal to tip; these run down through the front dorsal rays and blends into its back. *shrug. Edit: the delphax photos are also convincing! A few have that bronze/gold hue behind the mask and through the gill cover. On others, the coloration isn't as strong, or long. Photos of both ambiacus and delphax contain those variants.
  20. I bought mine from a small town electrician Zane. But I learned that the part you seek is not standard across manufacturers. best of luck
  21. You're doing a fine job Ribber. Drive on Captain Ahab!
×
×
  • Create New...