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Unread 07/03/2006, 06:54 AM   #1
TimmyB
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Unhappy Panic Time! 15 Hours No Power!!

Went yesterday and spent over 200 dollars on new additions for my tank.

No big fish purchases... but a new Pearl Bubble Coral, Cleaner and Fire Shrimp and a few Chalk Bass (think that is what they are called). Also some critters, blue leg hermits.

Put them in my 58 gallon tank at about 5 PM (after acclimating them for a while).

Big wind/thunder storm blows through the Norther Virginia area, and WHAM. 6:15 pm, I lost power.

Not really worried about temperature because it so damn hot in my house now, but am worried about flow.

This morning when I left for the office at 6:30am everyone looked ok, no heavy breathing or anything, but am worried. Really hoping power comes back on before I get home.

But if it does not, what should I do?? Buy a battery operated air pump and stone? Swish the water around with my arm for some movement? Do I need to worry about flow in my refugium?

Any tips are appreciated.

Thanks
Timmy B


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Unread 07/03/2006, 07:12 AM   #2
Billybeau1
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Well if your at work you better hope you get power back soon. I dont think the tank will survive too much longer without air.

A battery operated air pump and stone is great insurance. Tell your boss your sick and get to the store quick and buy that pump.


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Unread 07/03/2006, 07:17 AM   #3
mikeatjac
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I agree, after work is too long. Lot's of options; UPS, converter and of course battery operated air pump.


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Unread 07/03/2006, 07:22 AM   #4
Ralistin
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I siphoned water out of my refugium and poured it into my tank many times an hour during the hurricane last year until I got a generator. I had no choice since I could not buy anything at the time and had no emergency equipment for such a case. It was a ***** but it saved many things.

I agree though, if you do not have any flow, water movement, or oxygenation going on this long you had better get some quickly. My tank started to suffer about 8-9 hours after no power.


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Unread 07/03/2006, 07:40 AM   #5
Sk8r
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I once made it from Washington dc to Oklahoma City with airline and airstones rigged to 6 different tanks in the back seat, for fish ranging from a half grown piranha to 4 breeding pairs of angels, and only a single squeeze bulb. I could connect electricity at night in the motel rooms; for the rest [I wasn't driving] I sat cramped in the back seat of a Buick with the fish, and used my hands and feet in rotation to keep the fish alive. We all made it. Took nearly 4 days. My hands weren't worth much by then.

This was before the days of battery-powered bait bubblers.

Seems to me, if you could get two such squeeze-bulbs you could run them like a bicycle or foot-treadle, or rig some Rube Goldberg mechanical way to do a no-electricity-at-all tank-saver.


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Salinity 1.024-6; alkalinity 8.3-9.3 on KH scale; calcium 420; magnesium 1300, temp 78-80, nitrate .2. Ammonia 0. No filters: lps tank. Alk and cal won't rise if mg is low.

Current Tank Info: 105g AquaVim wedge, yellow tang, sailfin blenny,royal gramma, ocellaris clown pair, yellow watchman, 100 microceriths, 25 tiny hermits, a 4" conch, 1" nassarius, recovering from 2 year hiatus with daily water change of 10%.
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Unread 07/03/2006, 07:42 AM   #6
TorryRx
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I lost power during Hurricane Wilma last year. I have to work during the storms (I work in a hospital), so I used the battery powered air-pumps until I was able to come home. I will guess I was out power for at least 12 hours before I could hook up the generator, and those pumps worked wonderfully!! I didn't lose so much as a hermit crab.

I agree, tell the boss you're sick and run to the pet store to get them. The oxygen gets depleted pretty quickly after losing power, and I don't think you will have much left after 8 hours. 3 pumps will work for a tank that is 4 feet long, and don't use air stones since the larger bubbles will move the water around better.

HTH...good luck. We all feel your pain down here in South Florida!!!

Torry


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Unread 07/03/2006, 09:51 AM   #7
original-reefland
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Welp, if your at work, can't leave early, have internet access, read this for next time:

http://advancedaquarist.com/issues/aug2002/feature.htm


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Unread 07/03/2006, 09:53 AM   #8
TimmyB
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Thanks for all your help and replies!

Found out that power came back on at 7:30am.

Things still looked ok when I left at 6:30 so I assume there are no losses, but will check when I get home at 2.

Thanks for the link to the article original-reefland.

Tim


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Unread 07/03/2006, 08:12 PM   #9
mimmies11
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Was everything okay when you got home?


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Current Tank Info: 6 gal nano (soon will be converted into a mantis tank) 5.5 Mantis Tank (will move into the 6 gallon soon), 12 gallon nano (6 gallon critters will move in soon) Building a 90 gallon Reef with 30 gallon sump...will start cycling it as soon.
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Unread 07/03/2006, 08:15 PM   #10
xtrstangx
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Quote:
Originally posted by mikeatjac
I agree, after work is too long. Lot's of options; UPS, converter and of course battery operated air pump.
Yep.

We live in a pretty dependable area for electricity, no power outages over a minute for years. So I use a battery operated air pump and I will stir the tank around with a plastic stick I have to get the water moving a little bit around the corals.


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Unread 07/03/2006, 09:00 PM   #11
keinreis
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generators are a must! especially when you live in florida.


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