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Robert Smith

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  1. Culturing cockroaches is easy, just move to Sydney. And at certain times of the year you get plagues of flying white ants. The fish love them!
  2. Isn't that supposed to be: "Obit anus, abit onus"
  3. The only reason to use acrylic is if you need odd shapes. If you want scratch resistant (and strong) use polycarbonate, but that costs a bundle! I almost choked when I saw sheets at Bunnings for about $80 (1.2x0.8mx6mm or thereabouts). Oil crisis, what oil crisis? It costs $3.50 a litre for water. they can get oil out of a 1km deep hole, ship it across the world, process it into petrol and sell it for <$2. And that includes a bunch of tax! I want the world to get upset about the water crisis! It takes about 2kg of oil for every 1kg of plastic. About 25% of oil becomes petrol. A "barrel" is 159L. The specific density of oil is about 0.9 g/cm3. US$100 a barrel (spot-price, so probably a gross over-estimation). 1kg of plastic = US$1.40 worth of oil or $5.60 worth of petrol. That sheet of polycarbonate (density 1.2g/cm3) weighs about 5.8kg so contains about $8 worth of oil. A ten times increase due to processing and mark-up! That's more outrageous than the cost of water!
  4. Warren's right, your problem should not be heater response time or linearity of response or really anything about the heater (presuming you spent more than about $0.17 on your control circuit). The problem is sensor feedback (control loops) and they are notoriously dependent on the environment. A large thermal mass like a tank of water can be a very good thing for control loops, it acts as a buffer. eg1. Having a large still mass of water with a sensor on the far side of the tank gets you nice predictable heater response, but massive overshoot in tank temperature because it take a long time for the control loop to respond. But you don't get undershoot because heat loss is (mostly) uniform (wheras the heat source is a point). eg2. Having the sensor too close to the heater means you get no under/overshoot, but the heater will be going beserk trying to keep up with the minor fluctuations caused by the changing conditions at the sensor. The best situation is having the sensor far away from the heater, but having a very well mixed tank so the sensor sees changes quickly, but those changes are representative of the whole tank, not just a small patch of water or a particular current. So have a well mixed tank, keep the sensor out of the filter current and not close to the heater I think the control loop involving the environmental effects will massively overwhelm any hardware issues.
  5. This has the makings of a great YouTube video! By the way Spider, are you sure you're a boy? ("read the manual"!) That's almost as funny as the Yellows getting yellower.
  6. Instead of trying to pull it off, try pushing it off. Begin by closing one tap. Wear a pair of rubber-soled shoes and grip the bottom of the filter with your feet while pulling upwards with your hands. Now take a deep breath and blow really hard into the other tap. If you start seeing stars then stop. I've never tried this myself, but then who would! Even if this doesn't work, it should make your yellows piss themselves!
  7. By the way, if you are using Danish oil, the more coats the better the finish. The first few are diluted (wipe-on, wipe-off) and using steel wool in between. If you are diligent you can get a phenominal finish. I've never seen better than the finish I have on an NZ heart rimu TV cabinet I made. It has about 10 Coats of danish oil and looks and feels like silky glass. More depth also gives you more protection.
  8. Hi Cowboy, I have an 80L tank with glass cover (with a 4 cm gap down one short edge to allow tubes etc in/out). I used pine with Danish oil. I can't remember how many coats, but I typically would put down at least three and I think this was done in a hurry, so it's probably three coats. It looks a bit like Dwalk's, but the wood may be thicker on mine. I get condensation on the inside over the 4cm gap in the glass and had to add a line of silicon to act as a dam/drip-line to stop the condensation running out the sloping lid. I've had no substantial warping although I do get some mould growing on the inside of the lid. Most of it wipes off, but over the last two years some has grown into the wood. The outside still looks excellent. Danish oil may not be the best, but it seems to do the job well enough. Bob
  9. With a level you are measuring whether the metal is "level", and if the floor is not level, or the legs are not even then you can get the wrong result. With 8 legs you make the chance of one leg being the cause of being out of level much higher. what you need to measure is whether the tank support is planar. If you have a piece of plywood or other planar material (like the base of the glass tank) then drop that on top and see if it touches all the supports without bowing. If yes, call it planar and drop your tank on top and verify it sits evenly. Then you can block up any legs that you need to to ensure the tank is level (ie. not on an angle, as opposed to twisted/warped) so that the water doesn't all pool down one end (which, by the way may be easier and faster than using a level to align then tank, just drop a litre or two of water in the bottom and watch where it pools).
  10. Ditto. And that only gets worse because you have eight legs. You can prove it to be warped/not warped using a level and a ruler and assuming your floor is a flat (but not necessairly level) plane, but it's unlikely to be reliable enough.
  11. A level cannot tell you that the stand is twisted unless it is a very long and very straight one, in which case you're using it as a straight-edge, not a level. If you're using the 'level' part of it then you cannot be sure. If it's a good level then the straight-edge might be long enough to show any warping of the top pieces of metal, but even then I suspect not. I think the suggestion to carefully place the empty tank on top is the best. That will tell you if the frame is warped. If it's not then you just pack out the legs. Some people say measure three times and cut once, others say measure once carefully then cut once carefully. Me, I typically measure three times and usually end up cutting three times anyway. Knowing my limitations, I only ever make tripods. The benefit of this is that all our furniture fits nicely into the corners of the rooms. The downside is that this includes the dining room table and all our chairs (stools), but thank God for corner baths and flat screen TVs!
  12. I get green spot algae in the winter when the sun is low and reflects off the windows of the building next door and onto one corner of my tank. Ira, doesn't green spot spread through spores? So a UV filter should also reduce the amount of spores in the tank.
  13. I use a 3M "non-scratch" scourer on those hard to remove algae spots. Its scourer surface is green and like rough rubber. I've been using these for about 2 years and have started to notice some fine scratches. This may just be unseen grit getting trapped in the sponge, but I am careful and maybe it just indicates there's no avoiding scratches if you use scourers.
  14. Soap and water is always a good start. Do not use scourer pads or any abrasives. You often don't see the damage until the perspex drys out. However, to contradict myself, you can use some very fine abrasives on perspex to remove fine scratches. Brasso with a rag is good for this. Just ensure the surface is very well washed afterwards, Brasso is not exactly healthy!
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