Idiot sold me a crap heater...

Lycanthropic

AC Members
Jun 29, 2009
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Alberta
As most of you know, I bought a 135 gallon tank.
A heater came with it, but i recently found out it will not be adequate for my tank!!!!
Its a jager 3606- 150 watt
Does anyone have any suggestions for a heater thats not 100 bucks... is fully submersible and works well in brackish?
I dont mind buying 2 heaters for my tank at all.. but if so, could you please mention I will need 2 if I do?
Thanks!
 
www.kensfish.com is great highly recommended by many - for product variety, quality, food products, very good prices & low shipping costs.

I like the visi-therms cuz they are very accurate submersible & has temp. dial you can set your temps like a thermostat (deluxe vs stealth saves a few bucks but it's a matter of choice), now why didn't they think of this 30-40 yrs ago?!

& so reasonably priced!! but do check out ken's other products!

also you can compare with another highly recommended www.bigalsonline.com

good luck
 
A Jager isn't a crap heater at all. You just got one that is undersized for your tank. If you get a couple of 250W Jagers (or other brand) it should be fine.
 
Don't care for Jagers'...prefer Visi Therm....but you definitely need more wattage as Sev noted...in fact I would probably run 3 250 wattage ones....
 
Keep the jäger and add a second one, if one fail you have a backup. FYI jäger is one of the best heaters on the market and it's not a crap. Personally i like the rena smartheater.
For your tank the rule says 3wpg so you need at least 350-400 watts total.
 
I would go with two separate heater in a tank that large.
As far as I know, any heater will work in brackish.
 
Okay. Im thinking one on each end. I guess you win some and you lose some when you buy a used tank... I just cant believe he had tropical fish alive in that tank with one 150 w heater!
 
If the water temp you need in your tank isn't more than 10 degrees (F) (or about 6 C) above the coldest air temp of the room the tank is in (how cold does your house get in winter?), then 3 watts/gallon should be sufficient - call it 450 watts total. Any more than that and you'll want to go for 5 watts/gallon - about 700 watts.
So far as multiple heaters are concerned, I agree with the poster above who say multiple heating units. If you have large seasonal variations in the air temp in your house, you can purchase a 250W and a 300W, and use the 150, 250 and 300 in winter (for your 700W winter need) and then pull the 250W or 300W when summer rolls around (when you only need about 400)
At regular household voltage (call it 120V) keep in mind that at 450 watts, you're going to be pulling about 4 amps on the circuit and about 6 amps at 700 watts. Most household circuit breakers are rated between 10 and 20 amps per circuit, so you might want to check your circuit breaker box too (qualified electrician if you're not sure - safety first, last, and everywhere in between). You don't want to set everything up in that big beautiful tank only to find you can't turn on the TV...

(eHow: How to choose a heater for an aquarium)
 
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lol! Her in canada its really hard to predict the winter. Where Im living winters are usually medium to bad and summer is medium to super hot....
 
Plus I have no clue what the coldest temp my room gets is....
 
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