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Oxygen


doktorstick

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I was the one posting about the breaker and I had a little more info about that. I thought I would be smart and made sure that the sump pump and the powerheads were on different circuits just in case this happend. The breaker for the sump is what tripped so the powerheads were still going. Had a large Tunze and a couple of Koralia 2's but none really churned the surface of the water but it does move the water around. Sump pump and the lighting was off for about 2 1/2 days, all corals made it without any problems and about 1/2 of the fish lived. We lost almost all of our shrimp including a mated pair of CBS that were awesome, our puffer died and 2 of the 3 royal grammas we had. We were really bummed about the CBS and puffer, they were by far our favorite things in the tank. Tangs and blennies made it but were stressed.

After having this happen I realized how valuable power was for my aquarium...lol. I would recommend having a generator handy in case of an ice storm that knocks out power for a couple of days (it has happened before). If you wait until your power goes out you won't be able to find a generator to buy in the whole city. I have heard a few horror stories about tanks in Houston that the owners had to just watch die, some were without power for 2 weeks. It would be sad to see your reef slowly die.

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I was just going to mention the battery powered air pump that Hydro linked. I have one and it works perfectly. Others have bought battery backups that a power head pointed toward the surface runs on. I have even heard of people using a power inverter and running power from their cars during a power outage. The pump will run for quite a while though and is by far the cheapest and easiest safe guard. If a multi-day outage occurred when not a home it may be a different story.

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I actually bought a cheaper version of that battery-powered pump at Petco today for $18. It works the same way -- you plug it in and it only comes on if the power goes out. It uses 2 D cells,so it is probably not as powerful. It did the trick in breaking up the surface, though.

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Walmart and Academy have the D-battery powered air pumps for keeping minnows alive, they run $5-10 dollars. I have two that I keep on hand. Nice thing is that they hold 2 batteries but only run off one, so you always have a backup.

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Walmart and Academy have the D-battery powered air pumps for keeping minnows alive, they run $5-10 dollars. I have two that I keep on hand. Nice thing is that they hold 2 batteries but only run off one, so you always have a backup.

I think that is the same thing I was using. It would work on one battery. Do you know how long it will run on a pair of batteries?

However, I have no idea how to scale it. How many do you need to have enough water movement for a 100 Gal, etc.

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With the air pump it is not about water movement just adding oxygen to the water.

Well, it still begs the same question :-) Does a small D-cell powered air pump add enough oxygen for a 100 gallon tank? My hunch is no, considering how the small column of bubbles looks lost in a big tank.

It would be nice to know how many are really needed.

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