When I decided to go down the EI route, I knew one thing certainly was going to take the fun out of it, and that was the weekly 50% water changes!
My tank is nearing 400l, and the rim stands almost 1.5m from the floor. The thought of syphoning 8 full 25l jerry cans out, followed by filling & lifting the same again each week was not my idea of fun…
There are various DIY threads for water changes online, but most are not aimed at the planted aquarist. Especially for those using EI, where we need one large change weekly. Many shown online use a trickle system, where water is constantly added to the tank 24/7.
The good news is that for many people you can fairly easily & cheaply take all the strain out of the manual labour. If your floor is not concrete, or your tank is near an external wall, there is good chance you can replicate this. Luckily for me, my house is a Victorian terrace, which means there is a handy void under the floor for running pipes. Plumbing these days is all “push fit” and compression joints, so anybody can do it. Equally you could get a plumber in if you wanted.
Below is how I currently have the tank set up. On mine everything flows into the sump, but you don’t need one to do something similar. Critically the system is flood and drought proof! The tank overflows into the sump, and the sump in turn overflows to the drains.
At the moment a water change is as simple as…
- Turn off the sump return pump / powerheads
- Open the valve on the tank standpipe (shown in brown)
- Come back at my leisure (safe in the knowledge the tank can only empty as low as the top of the standpipe)
- Close the valve on the stand pipe
- Dose water conditioner into the tank
- Open the valve on the mains inlet (shown in grey)
- Come back at my leisure (safe in the knowledge that once the tank is full it will just flow to the drains)
Key:
Red / Orange: Standing 'herbie' overflow system
Purple: Sump return pipe
Brown: Draining standpipe
Green: Sump overflow to drains
Grey: Mains water in
The Tank Running As Normal
The Tank Once Drained
I'll compile a parts / method list later when I have time.
What I am planning on doing next is automating this whole process so the water changes itself weekly regardless of if I’m home or not. More on that to follow…
My tank is nearing 400l, and the rim stands almost 1.5m from the floor. The thought of syphoning 8 full 25l jerry cans out, followed by filling & lifting the same again each week was not my idea of fun…
There are various DIY threads for water changes online, but most are not aimed at the planted aquarist. Especially for those using EI, where we need one large change weekly. Many shown online use a trickle system, where water is constantly added to the tank 24/7.
The good news is that for many people you can fairly easily & cheaply take all the strain out of the manual labour. If your floor is not concrete, or your tank is near an external wall, there is good chance you can replicate this. Luckily for me, my house is a Victorian terrace, which means there is a handy void under the floor for running pipes. Plumbing these days is all “push fit” and compression joints, so anybody can do it. Equally you could get a plumber in if you wanted.
Below is how I currently have the tank set up. On mine everything flows into the sump, but you don’t need one to do something similar. Critically the system is flood and drought proof! The tank overflows into the sump, and the sump in turn overflows to the drains.
At the moment a water change is as simple as…
- Turn off the sump return pump / powerheads
- Open the valve on the tank standpipe (shown in brown)
- Come back at my leisure (safe in the knowledge the tank can only empty as low as the top of the standpipe)
- Close the valve on the stand pipe
- Dose water conditioner into the tank
- Open the valve on the mains inlet (shown in grey)
- Come back at my leisure (safe in the knowledge that once the tank is full it will just flow to the drains)
Key:
Red / Orange: Standing 'herbie' overflow system
Purple: Sump return pipe
Brown: Draining standpipe
Green: Sump overflow to drains
Grey: Mains water in
The Tank Running As Normal
The Tank Once Drained
I'll compile a parts / method list later when I have time.
What I am planning on doing next is automating this whole process so the water changes itself weekly regardless of if I’m home or not. More on that to follow…
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