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Hi Chris,
I may be overly simplistic, but have you considered a few 500 watt aquarium heaters. There are multiple low cost submersible heaters on Ebay and Amazon that are plug and play. I bought one for $9 - 300watt the other day. Are you wanting to have the heater out of contact of the fish? or something like this?
Also then you get redundancy and fast installation.
I have looked into many different options similar to the solutions on your link.
Hi Chris,
I may be overly simplistic, but have you considered a few 500 watt aquarium heaters. There are multiple low cost submersible heaters on Ebay and Amazon that are plug and play. I bought one for $9 - 300watt the other day. Are you wanting to have the heater out of contact of the fish? or something like this?
Also then you get redundancy and fast installation.
I have looked into many different options similar to the solutions on your link.
I see. the build on the first link looks great then. I would be concerned about trace voltage in the tank. I would surely add a GFCI into the plan then.
The STC-1000 Controller will handle a 2000 watt load on the relay built into it. Similar or the exact unit the guy in the video used. i bought one here in TN last mo for $12. This is all you need to control the element. A relay like he had might be good insurance over long haul, but for $12 i would try it.
You can get 500 -1000 -1500 watt elements for water heaters. They say you want stainless so as to not put any metals in the water. should be inexpensive $10-15
Any element larger than this and you are pushing the capacity of any 110 circuit. Not the best plan. You are only looking to increase temp 16-18 deg, you won't likely need that much power. Once it gets to temp it is just maintaining it anyway.
Bigger element means it is going to kick on and run shorter time. cycling your controller more. Same cost in operation in the long run.
Make sure that everything is well grounded and honestly, I would put the ends of the element outside the tank as to submerged as the guy in the video did. Over time, condensation will collect and could cause a problem. If you put it outside the tank and let the water pass by the element then into the tank, you can have the wires all exposed to keep dry, monitor and maintain as needed. Then the only risk of shock would be if the element cracks and but doesn't fail, then you can have stray voltage leak into the water. Not common but happens.
Likely wouldn't hurt the fish, but could be dangerous to a person for sure.
Hope this helps.
I see. the build on the first link looks great then. I would be concerned about trace voltage in the tank. I would surely add a GFCI into the plan then.
The STC-1000 Controller will handle a 2000 watt load on the relay built into it. Similar or the exact unit the guy in the video used. i bought one here in TN last mo for $12. This is all you need to control the element. A relay like he had might be good insurance over long haul, but for $12 i would try it.
You can get 500 -1000 -1500 watt elements for water heaters. They say you want stainless so as to not put any metals in the water. should be inexpensive $10-15
Any element larger than this and you are pushing the capacity of any 110 circuit. Not the best plan. You are only looking to increase temp 16-18 deg, you won't likely need that much power. Once it gets to temp it is just maintaining it anyway.
Bigger element means it is going to kick on and run shorter time. cycling your controller more. Same cost in operation in the long run.
Make sure that everything is well grounded and honestly, I would put the ends of the element outside the tank as to submerged as the guy in the video did. Over time, condensation will collect and could cause a problem. If you put it outside the tank and let the water pass by the element then into the tank, you can have the wires all exposed to keep dry, monitor and maintain as needed. Then the only risk of shock would be if the element cracks and but doesn't fail, then you can have stray voltage leak into the water. Not common but happens.
Likely wouldn't hurt the fish, but could be dangerous to a person for sure.
Hope this helps.
What do you mean by SSR?
That would be my suggestion. Then you let the relay in the controller control it. Simpler. Less electronics to control. and to protect from water etc
I have a 900 gallon system and made a DIY type of heater. The system is outside in a greenhouse with no heat in the greenhouse. The heater usese an instant hot water tankless heater. It cost about $300.00 to build and runs on propane. I dont know your budget or if you have a way to vent the heater outside but sure has worked for me. My tank temp was averaging 57 degrees before and now I can set it to whatever temp I need and it stays within 3 degrees. I can send pics and parts list if you are interested. It is very simular to a thread that was active a couple of weeks ago. Good luck with the KOI!
Hi Don,I would be interested in seeing your build if you wanted to upload pics on the site. I have a system similar size to what you are describing in my greenhouse and will be likely using a tankless propane water heater next winter for heat.
Don Cole said:
I have a 900 gallon system and made a DIY type of heater. The system is outside in a greenhouse with no heat in the greenhouse. The heater usese an instant hot water tankless heater. It cost about $300.00 to build and runs on propane. I dont know your budget or if you have a way to vent the heater outside but sure has worked for me. My tank temp was averaging 57 degrees before and now I can set it to whatever temp I need and it stays within 3 degrees. I can send pics and parts list if you are interested. It is very simular to a thread that was active a couple of weeks ago. Good luck with the KOI!
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