
I use this Heater.... http://www.drsfostersmith.com/product/prod_display.cfm?c=3578+3743+12060&pcatid=12060 its unpluged during the summer. Anyone esle use this heater? Ever had a problem i should look out for?
I have no idea why this issue has never been addressed in the aquarium hobby - IMO (and its an opinion) there is NO good OR reliable heater in the hobby.
If anything, the jager's are the closest thing to consistent and safe - but try heating 450 gallons with those in a garage :-(
one way or another, they break down, explode, fail, controllers stick, rot/rust in your tank etc. This would be a money maker if someone could design a close to flawless heater.
House
A fireplug on Ranco is what you need..
Russ, he was referring to the Aquanetics fireplug heaters run on a Ranco. They were the best, but I don't think they are made anymore.
Hey, you're the engineer that could be the next reefing millionaire. You know what's needed. You've got the schooling to design it. We're a great test market. The writing is on the wall. PLEASE design a freakin' reliable, dependable, accurate, durable heater that we will all send you lots of money for retirement!!!!! :Hydrogen:
swimmer
Russ, he was referring to the Aquanetics fireplug heaters run on a Ranco. They were the best, but I don't think they are made anymore.
Due to the reliabality of what we have to choose from I truly believe that the best solution most of us is the use of 2 heaters that are each half of the total wattage you need.
While I've seen this info posted already on MR..it's a good idea to add it here in this thread.
If you need 400w of heating, use 2 - 200W heaters. If one dies your tank shouldn't get too cold before you notice (you are checking your heaters on a daily basis - right?), and likewise if one gets stuck it usually won't make the temp high enough to fry everything in your tank.
The use of a controller shoud be emphasized!
Sound advice Kathy, but what about the heaters that fail with stray voltage. I've been zapped :frown: My issues are not limited to the heater failing in the on or off position.
Stray voltage reaches further than just heaters. Any electrical equipment in the water can produce that tingly sensation....No need to single out heaters.
