water amount in a 29?

debaric

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Does anyone know how much water a fully planted 29 gallon tank holds with about 3 inches of substrate? I was thinking about 25 gallons, am I off?

I need to know for calculating dry fert amounts, i want to be as precise as I can be.
 
I also own a 29 gallons. I was trying to calculate the water volume but when I have the driftwood, rock and so on I gave up - may be filling the tank with water, pour the substrate in, pump excess water out and measure or do 50% w/c and measure the adding amount. Sorry just my thought.

I still consider it as 29g when dosing fert i.e. if one drop of fert per gallon - 29 drops.
 
Does anyone know how much water a fully planted 29 gallon tank holds with about 3 inches of substrate? I was thinking about 25 gallons, am I off?

I need to know for calculating dry fert amounts, i want to be as precise as I can be.

Dont worry about being exact, its about consistency more than anything when it comes to plants.
 
I set my dosing calculator to 27 gallons, but the filter holds water also.
 
I agree with Riiz about not being exact. Your approximation of 25 to 27 gallons, depending on whether you include the filter or not may be very close. If you feel comfortable using what you think is the actual water volume, then go ahead, that's what it's really all about I think. It's your little ecosystem and you are the deus otiosus.

If you really want to get exact though, using the measured area of a plane cut horizontally through your tank can get you some really exact water volumes. For simplicity, you can take the measured plane area in inches to also be the volume in cubic inches for each 1-inch slice of the water column. For example, assuming a 10% water change of a 29 gallon tank would be ~ 3 gallons. I do not have the exact inside measurements of the 29 gallon, but assuming a length of 29.5 inches and a width of 11.5 inches, that would give you a plane with area of 339.25 square inches, say 340 in^2. That means that for every inch the water level drops, you are removing 340 cubic inches of water (conversion would be 1 gallon = 231 in^3). For a 29 gallon tank, every inch of water removed (measured vertically along the side of the tank) would be 1.47 gallons. So 2 inches of reduced water column height would equal approximately 3 gallons. Someone please check my math. Warning, following the advice listed below may result in loss of fauna, flora, homelessness and divorce.

If you are dealing with a fairly new tank with no fauna to disturb, you can get the water level at max; have all your planned decorations in place (logs, pots, rocks, fish condos, etc.). Now put a mark at your desired max water level. Now take everything out of the tank (except the water) and place into a bucket/tub. You will probably also need to temporarily disconnect the filter and dump all of the water from the filter into the tank. Now just measure the water level drop and write that number down, also confirm the inside length and width dimensions of your tank, I guessed earlier. Before making any calculations, put everything back into the tank and get the filter running ASAP. Once the tank is back in working order and all the spilled water is cleaned up, you can do your calculations. Take (Length) * (Width) * (water level drop) all in inches. Now divide that number by 231 cubic inches per gallon and you have your answer in gallons.

Anyone want to take bets, I have 26.7 gallons :-P

Other useful conversions:

1 gallon = 3785.41 cm3

1 ft3 = 1728 in3 = 7.48052 gallons

1 gallon weighs 8.34 pounds

5 gallon bucket (of water) weighs 41.7 pounds
 
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Doh! I forgot to carry the 2. Anyway, if you follow the advice above and measure the water level drop after removing all of the items from the tank, you would have just calculated the volume of all of those objects. Not very helpful for fert dosing, I know. You would still want to start with the water at max level. Then when everything is out, you would use a clean measuring tape to measure the water column height from the bottom of the tank. Using this height in the above calculation, with the appropriate conversion, would give you the volume of water in your fully decorated/planted aquarium.

If you don't want to worry about the filter volume, just exclude that step. Also, this method can be used to determine the volume of water one inch of water column height equals in irregular shaped tanks (bow, hex, corner, etc.). All you need to do is put a mark at the current water level (are you measuring from the meniscus . . .) Then you would measure down one inch and put another mark. Now drain that volume of water out and measure it with some precise measuring device. Five-gallon buckets work nice for this if you can get the whole inch into it without overfilling it. Then just use the simple formula for the volume of a cylinder: pie are round, not squared . . . times the height of the water in the bucket and you have that 1-inch volume for any complex shaped tank. If 1-inch is going to be more than 5 gallons for your tank, you can just measure the gallons required to raise the water back that 1-inch using some trusted 1-gallon container. Now think about it, umkay.
 
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