inquisitor
Aquarium Advice Newbie
- Joined
- Jun 13, 2018
- Messages
- 8
Plenty of people will have thought of this, but I didn't, my wife did. So for those of you like me. I have a new oscar and I was trying to figure out how to do big water changes. This is what my wife thought of.
Get a submersible water pump and hose. I got a pump and hose both from a local grow shop. It cost me less than $5o bucks. I went with a little more powerful one just to be sure it could push the water. Mine is 370 GPH, but it runs slower than that by the time it pushes it through my hose. Consider how long your hose needs to be and whether you need it to push water up, or can you let gravity help. I run mine out to a hedge, but you could just as easily run one to a bathtub or kitchen sink. Then I got 5 gallon buckets for a couple bucks a piece at walmart.
I fill up the buckets in the bathtub to get the right temperature, and I add my water conditioner. Then I mix up the water and let it sit for half an hour. Meanwhile, I put the pump low in the tank, turn off heaters and filters, and start it up. For me it's not super fast but way easier than by hand. I drained more than 25% of my 75 gallon in about 20 minutes. Without breaking a sweat.
Once the water is low enough I turn off the pump, pour in the buckets of water and restart everything. Just did a 30 percent water change on my 75 in less than 45 minutes.
I hope someone finds this helpful. I realize its obvious to some. But if you want a big tank and are scared of water changes I highly recommend this method. It was so fast and easy and it didn't even bother the oscar.
Get a submersible water pump and hose. I got a pump and hose both from a local grow shop. It cost me less than $5o bucks. I went with a little more powerful one just to be sure it could push the water. Mine is 370 GPH, but it runs slower than that by the time it pushes it through my hose. Consider how long your hose needs to be and whether you need it to push water up, or can you let gravity help. I run mine out to a hedge, but you could just as easily run one to a bathtub or kitchen sink. Then I got 5 gallon buckets for a couple bucks a piece at walmart.
I fill up the buckets in the bathtub to get the right temperature, and I add my water conditioner. Then I mix up the water and let it sit for half an hour. Meanwhile, I put the pump low in the tank, turn off heaters and filters, and start it up. For me it's not super fast but way easier than by hand. I drained more than 25% of my 75 gallon in about 20 minutes. Without breaking a sweat.
Once the water is low enough I turn off the pump, pour in the buckets of water and restart everything. Just did a 30 percent water change on my 75 in less than 45 minutes.
I hope someone finds this helpful. I realize its obvious to some. But if you want a big tank and are scared of water changes I highly recommend this method. It was so fast and easy and it didn't even bother the oscar.