Water change temperature question

LiveMermaid07

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Jul 7, 2009
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I had assumed that when I change the water for the pond, that since both it and the hose are outside that it would be the same temperature.

Is that actually true?

or true-ish?
 
If the pond is large enough and you're only doing a partial water change, a big change in temp isn't actually going to change the pond temp fast enough to be a problem. The larger the volume of water, the more water it will take to actually make the temp change significantly. If you're changing out more than 50% of the water and it's a smaller setup (less than say 500 gallons), then the temp difference might be an issue, but for instance my pond is about 1700-1800 gallons, and if I were to change out 50% of the water, the refill would take roughly 3 hours, and the small amount of water entering the pond at any one time is not enough to make a dramatic difference in the temp. If that makes any sense.
 
unless you're doing a really tiny water change, the hose temp doesn't matter -- after the first bit the water comes out at the temperature of the supply pipes, which are 5 - 10 feet underground and sort of at the average of the air temp for the past 6 months -- typically 40s - 50s
 
I don't adjust temp for water changes and i change 40-50%. Most of the time it's fairly close, so it's not a big issue.

With my cory tank I actually attempt to add in water that is several degrees colder than the tank to trigger them to spawn.
 
If the pond is large enough and you're only doing a partial water change, a big change in temp isn't actually going to change the pond temp fast enough to be a problem. The larger the volume of water, the more water it will take to actually make the temp change significantly. If you're changing out more than 50% of the water and it's a smaller setup (less than say 500 gallons), then the temp difference might be an issue, but for instance my pond is about 1700-1800 gallons, and if I were to change out 50% of the water, the refill would take roughly 3 hours, and the small amount of water entering the pond at any one time is not enough to make a dramatic difference in the temp. If that makes any sense.

That makes sense.
Mine is only 35g.
Since it was only the first water change of the season, I don't know the percentage, I just took out all but a few inches.

It does take maybe an hour or hour and a half to refill. (Which is a little annoying as taking it out doesn't take long at all, I just use 2 vacuum hoses, lol.)

They seem to like it when I refill though, constantly surfing the 'waves,' lol, so maybe they're ok with the temp (whatever it is)?


ps
I just planted 2 lilys, a mini cattail, and an iris something, I can't wait for them to sprout.
I HOPE they sprout! LOL
(all but the cattails were in there overwinter, but I raised them up in a basket so they're closer to the surface for now. I read even the bigger plants your suppose to start shallow and wait for them to get big before putting them lower?)
 
unless you're doing a really tiny water change, the hose temp doesn't matter -- after the first bit the water comes out at the temperature of the supply pipes, which are 5 - 10 feet underground and sort of at the average of the air temp for the past 6 months -- typically 40s - 50s

urgh. The pond temp was nearly 70, that would be a big difference...
but our average temps here for last 6 months might be more like 40 -60s, so maybe it wasn't too bad??
oy.
 
35 gallons?? Are you sure you meant 35 gallons since you said an hour to an hour and a half to refill? My 40 gallon tank takes 10 mins to refill. Maybe 15 if I do a bigger w/c... I'm thinking you meant 350 gallons? That would make more sense.
 
Nope, 35 gallon pond tote. The garden hose is rather slow.

(and I wasn't actually timing it, but I'm sure it took at least close to around an hour to refill yesterday. I use the 'shower' setting so I don't blast the fish out of the water lol.)

The indoor tanks don't take that long, but I still have to do those by the gallon (argh!)
I was looking into a python like fixture, but right now it wont work with the faucet / water heater set up.
 
Wow, OK in that instance I'd say filling slow like you're doing should help with the temp change issue. In a small volume of water, a fast temp change is something that can happen MUCH more easily than in a larger volume of water, so the temp of incoming water becomes more important the smaller the volume of water.
 
Ok, I just don't want to shock/harm them, but they seem to enjoy it so maybe it's fine. (?)

I went out to see them today, I've got 2 little plant shoots yay!
 
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