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All the research I am aware of seems to agree with a rule of thumb of 3 to 5 watts per gallon being required to heat a system with enough flexibility to not stress the fish. The more exposure to the outside extreme temperatures the closer to 5 watts per gallon. The warmer the climate the closer to the 3 watt range a design can be planned.
All the research I am aware of seems to agree with a rule of thumb of 3 to 5 watts per gallon being required to heat a system with enough flexibility to not stress the fish. The more exposure to the outside extreme temperatures the closer to 5 watts per gallon. The warmer the climate the closer to the 3 watt range a design can be planned.
Cheer up! the glass is half full. Any system needs some tweaking/set up.
Suggest that you borrow/invest in some measurement equipment - such as multi-meter ~ 10USD - should be available at any hardware store.
http://www.walmart.com/ip/Digital-Multimeter-10709/14521541
You can test the heater by heating a small volume of water and compare to kettle
- Recently a member of this forum traced his problems to a faulty heater element - (it was new).
With your ~40A SSR you should be able to drive 3 elements x 1500W /120V -> 37.5A - I just don't know what your house supply can handle - and the electricity bill. This will take 11 hr's to get from 15degC to 25degC (loss less)
The enjoyment received from activities such as these sometimes need to offer the only profit.
Sorry I haven't followed this conversation too well from the start or I would have a better idea of your over all set up. But from what I do know so far, I think the best thing to do if possible might be to "partition" your fish into a smaller area requiring less energy. If for instance you could fashion some sort of portioning wall or barrel within the fish way, you might be in a better situation to "over-winter in 500-1000 or less gallons that need be heated.
I think rather than throwing more money at the problem, more options should be explored. There are after all, more ways than one to skin a fish.
I would be speculating either way. Logic says uncover and air will warm surface, but evaporation causes evaporative cooling. Not sure which would win. Try covered for 24 hrs and then uncover and see
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