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#1 |
Back from the dead
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Sick Jason!
I knew a guy with I think a 300 gallon surge tank down in Key West. He was on a canal and a pump would fill up a 300 gallon barrel then when it was full a valve would open and the barrel would completely replace the tank water. And the tank water wouled drain back into the canal. Think free easy water changes awesome!
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You probably wont remember that test you failed, but you'll never forget the girl you were with the night before, when you decided not to study. |
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#2 | ||
Gramps 4x's
![]() Join Date: Oct 2008
First Name: Horatio Seymore Hiny
Location: Boca Raton - North of La Habana
Posts: 8,774
Trading: (8)
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While it certainly is convenient, not something I would do with my tank and the value of the fish I have. In the business, I did it for a while. Lots of folks in Florida that specialize in delivering ocean water also. Eventually, I set up 200 gallon per day RO units, a trailer with a 100 gallon tank and mixed my own salt. I no longer have the trailer but have two 45 gallon containers in my garage with the same RO unit. I pump the water out of my tank and pump back in from the containers where I just throw the salt in. The reason to refrain from sea water is it contains pathogens and parasites. Unless you treat that water in a recirculating system with heavy duty UV's, before introducing it to your tank, you are seriously risking introducing lots of junk that is free floating in the ocean, into a very confined system that can crash it. After a few fatal episodes that arose as result of sea water, never did it again.
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