I knew I wasn't giving my fish enough water changes, so I've been longing for this for a long time. But somehow never got the time to put it together, mainly due to laziness, until it became a necessity. When my daughter started walking and crawling, water changes started resembling more and more to baby baths in the middle of my living room.
- I used the dishwasher tap to get water. I removed the dishwasher hose and installed a T shape splitter. Right side hose furnishes the dishwasher, while left side (yellow) hose furnishes the aquarium. I decided to put a safety faucet (red) in order not to keep the hose under constant pressure, since I had a hard time preventing it to leak around the nozzle. I had to use two rings, but I was afraid it might start to leak again as hose ages:

- I ran the yellow hose under the kitchen counter till the back of the aquarium, then into the compartment underneath by drilling holes in it, then installed another faucet that flushes over a vase were water is laid to rest and warmed up. The vase also contains a heater and a small pump:




- after it has warmed up, water is lifted from the vase up into the aquarium using the small pump that is connected to the aquarium using the transparent hose that is terminated with the green hook that hangs on the wall of the aquarium:

- to drain the aquarium, I used the filtering pump located inside the aquarium and added two faucets into the filtering compartment. Picture shows filtering mode, where water is diverted to the left and falls back into the aquarium (left faucet open, right faucet closed):

- in the drain mode, left faucet is closed and right faucet is open, diverting the water into the green hose that is terminated into the kitchen sink:

- left faucet also plays a safety role. If right faucet fails, there won't be enough pressure anyway to push the water down the drain hose, since left faucet is still open. If however all hell brakes loose, I've put the filter pump about 10 cm above the bottom of the aquarium, enough to leave some water for the fish to survive.
Cost: ~ 125 EUR (fancy vase added a lot to this, couldn't find a plastic bin of that shape and size)
Vase/aquarium size ratio gives me a 12% water change in one shot.
Procedure:
- open dishwasher faucet
- open vase faucet
- fill up vase (2 min)
- close both faucets
- power up heater
- wait for the water to warm up
- power off heater
- open drain faucet
- close filter faucet
- drain water (2 min)
- open filter faucet
- close drain faucet
- power up pump
- wait for the vase to empty
- power off pump
Reduces time and especially effort to do a water change and it's much more fun also
"Efficiency is the highest form of laziness"

- I used the dishwasher tap to get water. I removed the dishwasher hose and installed a T shape splitter. Right side hose furnishes the dishwasher, while left side (yellow) hose furnishes the aquarium. I decided to put a safety faucet (red) in order not to keep the hose under constant pressure, since I had a hard time preventing it to leak around the nozzle. I had to use two rings, but I was afraid it might start to leak again as hose ages:

- I ran the yellow hose under the kitchen counter till the back of the aquarium, then into the compartment underneath by drilling holes in it, then installed another faucet that flushes over a vase were water is laid to rest and warmed up. The vase also contains a heater and a small pump:




- after it has warmed up, water is lifted from the vase up into the aquarium using the small pump that is connected to the aquarium using the transparent hose that is terminated with the green hook that hangs on the wall of the aquarium:

- to drain the aquarium, I used the filtering pump located inside the aquarium and added two faucets into the filtering compartment. Picture shows filtering mode, where water is diverted to the left and falls back into the aquarium (left faucet open, right faucet closed):

- in the drain mode, left faucet is closed and right faucet is open, diverting the water into the green hose that is terminated into the kitchen sink:

- left faucet also plays a safety role. If right faucet fails, there won't be enough pressure anyway to push the water down the drain hose, since left faucet is still open. If however all hell brakes loose, I've put the filter pump about 10 cm above the bottom of the aquarium, enough to leave some water for the fish to survive.
Cost: ~ 125 EUR (fancy vase added a lot to this, couldn't find a plastic bin of that shape and size)
Vase/aquarium size ratio gives me a 12% water change in one shot.
Procedure:
- open dishwasher faucet
- open vase faucet
- fill up vase (2 min)
- close both faucets
- power up heater
- wait for the water to warm up
- power off heater
- open drain faucet
- close filter faucet
- drain water (2 min)
- open filter faucet
- close drain faucet
- power up pump
- wait for the vase to empty
- power off pump
Reduces time and especially effort to do a water change and it's much more fun also

"Efficiency is the highest form of laziness"








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