Tiny tank heaters?

captmicha

Members
All the heaters for tiny tanks that's I've tried are awful. Tanks like 2.5-5 gallons.

Are there ANY decent ones out there?
 

ddavila06

Members
hey, how many tanks are you plannning on heating and where in your house are they located? why are you heating them??

ok, I had a similar issue, when I was more into breeding corydoras I had many 10s, 5.5s and the basement gets cold during winter ( I use no heaters most the year except on the coldest of winter). So in my previous house I would leave the furnace room open and that was sufficient..on this new place it is not, but for some reason there is an opening for air (in the laundry room/weird) so i opened it ). last year, before i realized there was a vent opening, I used a room heater set up at 74..was fine, but i feel i used too much power for it..

so yeah. if its multiple tanks in a room you can do something like that?
 
Heaters below 50 watts are generally not thermostatically controlled. They are generally of such a low wattage (7-10 watts) that they aren't physically capable of heating water up much more than a few degrees above ambient. In which case, the volume of the tank and the ambient air temperature will have a great effect on what the water temperature is. A 10 watt mini heater will heat up a 2.5 gallon tank about 5 degrees above ambient, a 5 gallon tank about 2.5 degrees above ambient.

If you are just looking to get the water above ambient then this is fine. If you are looking to maintain a specific temperature then a 50 watt heater with an adjustable thermostat is the best way to go.

Andy
 

captmicha

Members
Thanks guys! It's just a couple of back up tanks. Not in a fish room, just a bedroom. I stick some established filter media in the sponge filters when I need to have one up and running.

I like the 2.5 for QT for small fish bc it's exactly the size that one scoop of my QT med doses. And easy to change 25% of the water daily pre-dosing.

I have a few mosquito fish in it right now.
 

mchambers

Former CCA member
Heaters below 50 watts are generally not thermostatically controlled. They are generally of such a low wattage (7-10 watts) that they aren't physically capable of heating water up much more than a few degrees above ambient. In which case, the volume of the tank and the ambient air temperature will have a great effect on what the water temperature is. A 10 watt mini heater will heat up a 2.5 gallon tank about 5 degrees above ambient, a 5 gallon tank about 2.5 degrees above ambient.

If you are just looking to get the water above ambient then this is fine. If you are looking to maintain a specific temperature then a 50 watt heater with an adjustable thermostat is the best way to go.

Andy
Nice explanation, Andy!
 
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