I just want to take the time to tell you that your videos are awesome. It's really inspiring me to get more handy when it comes to building stuff. I've always been great with electronics and computers but not so much with power tools or plumbing. You're really providing a huge wealth of information to hobbyists around the world.
@RaindropServicesNYC7 жыл бұрын
You explain things so well, you really don't leave any stones un turned. Thanks.
@fishtalk33794 жыл бұрын
While not being close to a water source, treated water in a 55 gallon drum to an air pump and a check valve before the dripper worked perfectly. The air pump also aerated the water keeping movement as well where the drum lasted for weeks before it needed to be refilled. This worked including adding a sponge filter to the drum. seem excessive but works for me. Always liked your videos where I learned a lot taking what I've seen useful from them. Thanks!
@GeoHvl8 жыл бұрын
I took your advice and now I have my 55 show from Clear for life with a one inch top drain. I went one step more I added a ball valve at the bottom tee where the drain leaves the tank for easy draining. I drilled a 1.25" whole in the bottom of this tank install a one inch bulkhead fitting to the tee fitting ran a stand pipe to the top drilled 6- 5/16ths holes for drainage. from the back of the tank I ran the 1" pipe through the floor into my basement to a drain in that location. I purchased a drip timer, 50' 1/8 inch drip tubing, a 2G/hour drip head ran the tubing back through the floor into my tank. I did test the drip head and it did in fact drip just over 2 gallons in one hour. I set the time to 4 hours a day that give me a 224 gallon change every month. NO MORE WATER CHANGES! I am on a well so no chlorine problems. I have African Cichlids with Caribe Sea substrate for Africans. What a great idea.
@youngz13o9 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the more detailed video joey but one thing i havent seen anyone do yet is how they tap a water source. For me, this is the reason why i havent done my auto water changes yet. Love the videos. Take care
@Threedog19635 жыл бұрын
That's my concern as well. I'd either have to have a garden hose running from outside or have a plumber pipe a line to where my tank is. Or move my tank to my bathroom where I'd have a water supply and drain close by.
@davidfoley64029 жыл бұрын
I'm also on well water, but I'm moving my aquariums to a house in the city. When I set up the drip and drain system, I'm going to run an in-line carbon filter, because I don't think plastic bottles are a good look. They're good for stuff like the emergency heat you showed us, but they shouldn't be a permanent fixture in an aquarium. Huge fan of your work, by the way!
@allenhart18125 жыл бұрын
David Foley how are you doing carbon line also if there is continuous water exchange then why would one need todo big water changes ever 3-4 months
@RoyalCrab9 жыл бұрын
Awesome step-by-step tutorial Joey! Planning to implement one of these along with a few of your other projects I have in mind to complement it nicely. Thanks for the inspiration and for keeping making these videos for us!
@floydmorey9 жыл бұрын
I love how you simplify projects cool video I like the fact that you talked about well water vs city water a lot of people don't talk about well water I think it's a good topic for videos
@r.i.t.randominterestingthi40318 жыл бұрын
man, i am already looking this never do water changes for the past 2 month. this drip system is so awesome
@jessiecorceles63177 жыл бұрын
Joey , of all of your crazy amazing DIY ideas this one I loved the most ! I've tried it and observed it for a couple of days ... it's been a while now since I replaced water on my tank, It surely help a lot to a very busy man ike me and I can still enjoy the clear waters on my aquarium . Thank you so much man ! by the way my tank is 130 gals and my fishes doubled their sizes in just 3 weeks, with some assistance from probiotics .
@MikeV6078 жыл бұрын
Hey Joey - KUDOS: Your drip system/overflow is great and really gets the DIY juices flowing! An alternative for filtering the source water are the commercial inline filters (e.g. nitrate, activated carbon...) used most often for refrigerators, ice makers etc. These could be placed anywhere convenient inline between the source and the tank. They're not that expensive and last 1500 - 2000 gallons. (I have high nitrates in my well water so I filter through both an inline nitrate and inline activated carbon filter into buckets for weekly partial water changes....so your drip system has me pondering!)
@anderswilkas53198 жыл бұрын
I would love to se you tackle a aqaponics DIY setup, preferably from plan to finished system. Your way of explaining things are really easy to understand so your take on aqaponics would be wonderful. Does your book cover this topic?
@toscanigomes10 ай бұрын
Valeu!
@EZimmerman39 жыл бұрын
Thanks for addressing Chloramines in a drip system.. Seems so simple when you explain it. Thanks for all your help!
@thekingofdiy9 жыл бұрын
Your welcome!
@MrVinodbhatia7 жыл бұрын
Great DIY video as always. Is there a DIY video on how the overflow can also be modified so that along with overflow for continuous drip system, it can also be used to drain the tank completely or 50% for water changes without having to drill the aquarium ?
@mikespags2968 жыл бұрын
got to love this guy.cant get any better. has improved all my aquairums
@joonyang27318 жыл бұрын
Hi Joey! Thanks for all the uploads!! After being out of the hobby for years now, your projects are tempting me to come back!! One of the things I used to do when doing water changes was to condition the water (eliminate chlorine and metals) before filling the aquarium. How do you condition tap water with the drip system?
@thegoodbadandtheugly84313 жыл бұрын
Oh my goodness! I absolutely love this Man and his mind! Thank you so very much!!!
@bshenanagins9 жыл бұрын
Hey Joey just a quick thought, I like the simplicity of the DIY carbon filtration. My only concern is whether or not all the carbon is going to be utilized. Eventually the dripping will carve a path and only pass through the strongest center of gravity with least resistance, leaving the carbon closer to the walls of the water bottle untouched. I would think maybe once a week shake up the bottle to ensure all the carbon is being filtered through or creating some type of shower drip effect?
@dennisjay89028 жыл бұрын
I think your concern would be correct if the carbon bottle is above water. In the video the bottle is inside the aquarium and submerged so that would not be a problem. My thoughts anyway.
@MultiLEGODOG7 жыл бұрын
been doing the drip system several years! thanks to you ! water is spot on year after year, no water changes but a few over flows due to my drain, but that is my own fault. if your going to leave you can tun it off for a trip, or turn it down so it just covers evaperation. i have a over the top rail drain some times gets air in it and loses prime so should have 2. but a drilled tank drain would be best . for the drip, i used under sink adapter, to ice maker tubing then a inline icemaker filter and at the end, a inline needle valve for drip control, works great
@chiefchick5 жыл бұрын
Just an additional information, Joey, catalytic carbon can be used for those who uses well water, like what our county does, because it treats iron, magnesium and sulfur in well water. And to reactivate carbon, i read that all you need to do it bake it at a high temperature.
@odanhammer9 жыл бұрын
Just an idea , using the concept of a toliet on a drip system. When you flush , the tank emptys into the bowl and then fills up again with a float stopping the flow when it fills to high. Taking that float system and putting it into a bucket or even having some setup in tank , might make a faster and easier top up ..
@kylecrofton17127 жыл бұрын
Love your videos man I watch u every single day I love Frank and the Rays
@ericlind65815 жыл бұрын
If you drip in say about 3.5% of the volume daily, that's over a 100% change per month approximately. Of course it's not the same as a 100% change all at once, but it's still swaps out much of the water, spread out daily. That may be a bit too much as super clean water will starve out your plants.
@nosbormelo9 жыл бұрын
Hi Joe... You could try a sand filter... Not the moving bed with sand but an actual sand filter like the one used on municipalities water treatment station or try to come up with a freshwater refugium.
@billsmith49325 жыл бұрын
I really think this is one of the most important videos on this channel...
@richardsees31779 жыл бұрын
For loose bulk charcoal go to a Walmart and on the bottom shelf is knee high pantyhose they sell a pair for .50 fill the charcoal in that works great ...
@richardsees31779 жыл бұрын
petsmart sells bulk by the milk carton full
@JamesG197719 жыл бұрын
I've had a drip system in place since your previous video. Personally, I would never go back to the standard water change method as its not only far simpler but my fish stock have been healthier as a result. As far as cost goes, I feed to overflow into the toilet cistern or water storage for the garden so I would say any heating or water treatment cost is offset.
@billgoodliffe18687 жыл бұрын
Excuse me Joey. I was just wondering could you do a DIY on a cylinder tank. Also do pros and cons of it. Thank you so much for your time.
@danishjabbar69055 жыл бұрын
Wow . That settles it ! Drip system it is !!! Dude your are really the best 👍
@JayDillon-mm6yv8 жыл бұрын
I do nearly complete water changes every other day or so, instead of filtering or using anti algae formulas. Seems to work fine. The bottom of the tank has some rock but only a small amount of gravel. I don't scrub or clean the bottom although I might siphon out particulates and stuff if I notice buildup down there. I have to do some interior glass scrubbing but not too bad. I use well water, no chlorination. (Replacing tank water completely or almost completely with chlorinated water would be a death sentence, I'm sure.) My fish are "feeder fish" that I got for 7 for a dollar locally. These fish are very tough, very beautiful fish, some white, some orange, and have had offspring so currently I have 2 generations in one tank. .. and have survived moderate to lousy conditions. Previously I have had a few hybrid Japanese goldfish which I loved but they did seem to be more susceptible to poor tank conditions and ended up swimming upside down far too much. I still love em though, might get more of those if I develop the requisite care/skills. Previously I tried using all sorts of filters and pumps but got disgusted with them all. I just use a few little air bubblers and the water changes. (Siphon hose is kept full of water and just dropped into kitchen sink when needed to remove water from tank.) Hope this comment will be of interest, if not, feel free to delete it or criticize it. Thank you for your video, it's great.
@headphonejack94794 жыл бұрын
Drip Systems are also good for flimsy/frail fish. Some fish don't like it when you change ~40% water very quickly, they stress out.
@fhermo838 жыл бұрын
Yes I would love for you to revisit the hob sump filter with the window seal planter box I did that build for my 45 planted tank but it was giving me a lot of issues with water spilling over what would happen was if I didn't stay on top of changing the filter floss it would constrict the water flow and with the pump I had was pretty strong so it would start to squirt over the side and would get water all on the floor so if I wasn't home to catch it I would have a big problem I made every adjustment I could come up with i made a top for it but water would still get out some how I even went with a smaller pump but to no avail so I trashed it and went with a whole different style same concept but now I am using some big plastic containers with a lid so no more spills but I would like to see if you could better the first build I love those planter boxes so see what you can come up with I know all your followers would love it too. Keep on shining bruh!
@mikeevans89459 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the vids. I have learned tons from you in the past few months! A suggestion for subjects to revisit/address- Sizing the DIY Moving bed filters. How much sand or K1 does a person need for his/her own aquarium?
@MrRazor19759 жыл бұрын
I intend on using this system in my new design. I thought about running the fresh tap water through a rainfresh Carbon filter prior to going through the the drip system. The nice thing is they state how many gallons those filters are rated for so by calculating the flow rate I can figure out how long the filter will last.
@geraldcactusboy6 жыл бұрын
Great. clean and concise. I'd like to see an overflow in the sump, with a carbon chamber to remove chlorine. and a float in a chamber of the sump. I have a sump under the tank, and would need to eject the exchange water at sink level (or a holding tank)
@khenryhector9 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the update, this was a really informative video. I would like to see more on the bio-sand filter that was featured a couple videos back though.
@magzire8 жыл бұрын
very nice tutorial
@BestIeverhadisyou6 жыл бұрын
I would like to know more about this.. as in a step by step method if possible. I have a water tank, and a sump for draining. How do you connect it to the water tank? How do you prevent leaks? I have never done anything like this before.
@mskraft5 жыл бұрын
Hi! First, I love your videos. Thank you for sharing your gift! I have a quick question on this project. I’ve had the drip system installed for a while now and it works beautifully. However, I’m experiencing a bacteria bloom that seems to be dissipating but very slowly . Any suggestions on how to get my water back to crystal clear with the constant water turnover?
@glxbt19879 жыл бұрын
Hey Joey. I've been doing some research on how to get rid of diatoms. Not really any good videos.
@forwardcontracting39387 жыл бұрын
hey question for the king. im starting up a drip system but hate the look of a pvc overflow. also i dont want to drill my aquarium. so my idea was to possibly use a small submergable foutain pump. of course an adjustable flow pump while also using a valve to get my desired drip ..what i would like to know is ..what is your thoughts on using a fountain pump for the drainage. thx input is appreciated.
@mxgryan6 жыл бұрын
Im learning. SO much to take in!
@WhatIsMisophonia5 жыл бұрын
I just came here to say: P L A N T S. That's how you never do water changes.
@sonofaquack69874 жыл бұрын
but wouldn't the waste build up as molm or build up?
@WhatIsMisophonia4 жыл бұрын
@@sonofaquack6987 It's just humus, which is considered inert. Seems like so many people in the aquarium hobby forget that the bottoms of ponds are lined with more than a little bit of molm. Now that being said, dissolved organic matter can build up in the water column over time, and certain creatures that are used to particularly pure water may have difficulty. The best animals for a heavily planted tank would come from slow moving dirty rivers and marshy lakes.
@bigjayinga8 жыл бұрын
Great video. How is the pond doing?
@johnhayes94375 жыл бұрын
So Joey... since I installed a drip system on my 110 gallon tank... I should or shouldn't need to bother with an alge scrubber ???? I'm thinking not. Please chime in and let me know your thoughts. Thanks,
@johnfletcher26646 жыл бұрын
i put in the new water changes but my overflow keeps making a gurgling noise love all the info you give us all thanks loey
@ernpyr8 жыл бұрын
Joey, big fan of your projects. Could I use a system like this to not only save time but also heat my outdoor 75 gallon pond during spring/fall? I have an outdoor hot water source...
@danielsvendsen63349 жыл бұрын
Which program use you for your awesome videos
@johnjstevenson8 жыл бұрын
The lowest setting I can find for a micro-dropper is .5gpm - do you know of any which are slower? I'm topping off a 90g tall & don't need 12 gallons/day. If all else fails I'll swap to a timer. Just found you by the way, great, great videos! Thanks for all you do!
@cynthiagravatt67508 жыл бұрын
question: do we really want to replace 1 or more gallons per hour, this sounds like a lot, however I have no way of knowing if only old water is going down the overflow..... which would mean that some of the new incoming water could be leaving the tank too. I was thinking of running my RODI system straight to the aquarium like you have it here.... but because I would need to add the minerals back into the water, I thought I could let the system run every 3-4 days for 24 hours (which equals 24 gallons) and have it set to do this about every 3-4 days. My tank is 55 gallons. Does this sound like enough... of course I could test the water and see how well it works. Anything I might be missing? I have a back injury so I'm really excited about this new project.. It's really going to help me a lot. I hope you figure this out for Saltwater too. I sure enjoy watching your videos and feel I can trust the information you provide. Thank you for taking the time to put all this information out there for us... I would have never thought of this stuff. Cindy
@Xavier_9159 жыл бұрын
Cool!! this is a something I will probably keep in mind when I get my own house! genius joey! good job!
@Dustpuuppy6 жыл бұрын
What about a drip system that feeds into the sump? Seems like this would give the most consistency as the fresh water would be thouroughly mixed before going into the tank. It would also hide the extra equipment, like chlorine filters.
@JLuna_Arch8 жыл бұрын
Hey Joey ! thanks so much for your dedication and effort on making these awesome videos I'm learning lots! I was wondering if you had anything in your repertoire for making an automatic/timed feeder ?
@ushomestead5 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for including closed captioning!
@WobblesandBean9 жыл бұрын
Watching videos like this is exactly why I hire people like you to do this stuff for me. [whoosh over my head]
@rhyshughes85428 жыл бұрын
Unfortunately I don't have a water supply near my tank and it's impractical to pipe it closer. After watching this I had the idea of having 2 drums under my tank one for tap water that will have a small pump running to a inline carbon filter and then to the drip. The second would be for the overflow water from the drip system. Would I be right in saying this can be done?
@Wayne-fe1ed6 жыл бұрын
The consistency of a drip system, filtered with carbon seems perfect. However, any ideas on treating the water for increased GH and KH for cichlids with the drip system?
@mariacherry59468 жыл бұрын
Hi there. Thanks so much for all that you put up here for those of us wanting to improve our fish keeping without having to bust a fou-fou valve doing so. I have a query with regard to buffering the water in this system. I use New Zealand rain water collected off my roof for my fish, and I find that during water changes things work better if I add 1 tbsp of epsom salts and one teaspoon of baking soda to each water change. This is for (for the most part)180L tank that I have siphoned 4 12L buckets from - so call it 40L (I have more than one tank). How would I ensure this with the drip system? Many thanks and keep up the good work!! =-) Edit: I would love to own a copy of your book, but you dont ship to New Zealand? Any hope of convincing you to make an exception? I would be happy to pay postage. =-)
@SamuelHernandez-om5xd8 жыл бұрын
hi, very Nice proyect! In México we hace a very hard water, so one off the Main objectives with the water changes it's to eliminate the additional salt that acumulate cause the water evaporation. So... do you have any cheaper solution with out purchase an ósmosis filtration system or adaptation for this DIY proyect? thanks and greetings from México!
@marciogoliveira9 жыл бұрын
Joe, great video, thanks for posting. For someone who has unlimited water supply (clean and free), would it make sense to increase the flow of the drip system and get rid of bio filtration? Do you know how many gallons per hour would be necessary?
@ArkAquaria6 жыл бұрын
Dude yes. Needed this simple solution! Thank you!
@paultepes27758 жыл бұрын
You could use a HMA filter with these right? That's what I'd probably do though I worry about the amount of waste water.If not I'd add zeolite to the prefilter as I have chloramines. Which brings me to the next question, would making the pre filter (carbon and zeolite in my case) inline work? I don't like the look of it on the aquarium.
@mikebrown32466 жыл бұрын
Looking to setup a drip system. I have a utility sink in the basement. Would you just attach to the faucet on that as opposed to tapping a water line ?
@scoobamg7 жыл бұрын
when you put on the adapter that will raise the head pressure. Smaller the ID (inner Diameter) the higher the pressure. I don't think its much but I would have to do the math on it. and of course I can't since I don't have all the values needed to get the final head pressure. But in summery what your doing does work for the application your using it for
@espiritusantos56587 жыл бұрын
hi Joey, is there a way to use drip method or something like that with saltwater aquarium? many thanks!!!
@guys97937 жыл бұрын
When you are dripping 200ml - 2000ml/hour you don't need the pressure regulator. These cheap pressure regulators only work if there is a minimal flow of 10L/hour (2g/hour). If the flow is lower you are not going to see the reduction in pressure. You'd be better off closing the tap till the point you get your desired dripping rate. Your drip regulator at the end of the pipe serves for fine tuning.
@kevinvanslycke83868 жыл бұрын
Great video! Where can I get a drip emitter? Can I use it for a dosing container/top off container as well?
@garethelliott78238 жыл бұрын
After watching, I do not have a continuous water supply or a drain near my aquariums. For end goal being stability between water changes: could one use an ATO and a pump in the tank on a digital timer? 2 containers, say 25 gallon pet food containers. Fill one with clean water, the other empty with a float valve. Attach ATO to clean, timed pump to empty. Set timer to remove say 10% of tank volume over 24 hours. Empty and fill as needed. Just wondering if could work as well.
@danny-the-viking68234 жыл бұрын
So will the drip tower sump be all together because of the slow moving water through out the tower pass the heat and back through the pump will this class as a overflow, filter and a water change.
@anthonypope84295 жыл бұрын
good video and very good info
@terra2468 Жыл бұрын
what about the filtration? is there a filtration cycle + drip? or just drip (water in-out)?
@numairsiddiqui33118 жыл бұрын
What am I doing here? I don't even have a fish...
@pumpkinpiecookie27448 жыл бұрын
In the future, u will
@raihanjabed58008 жыл бұрын
Its becuase of Joe i decided to pick up a tank again haha
@victimcastrate222tipssnitc58 жыл бұрын
Numair Siddiqui You have the itch
@JayDillon-mm6yv8 жыл бұрын
You are destined to have fish. It is your destiny.
@metu58188 жыл бұрын
Irrigation system... Your ripped...remember?
@UltimaStealth6 жыл бұрын
Any advice on how to do this with the tank on 1st floor of home? I was thinking I could run airlines through floor to basement for water source and drain. Is it safe to run airline in such a way? Should I use like metal piping instead?
@revolution37976 жыл бұрын
What kind of treatment would you put in well water for a planted Aquarium?
@zinglebluesun6 жыл бұрын
None
@whydoineedahandle2698 жыл бұрын
Great video. Don't you think it would be prudent to mention in the video that if the drain system fails it has the potential to flood your house? I realize it is just one drip at a time but if you are away on vacation this could be disasterous. Got any DIY overfill alarms?
@thekingofdiy8 жыл бұрын
We are talking a drip that overflows down pipes that can withstand 600 times the flow. Over the last 10 years, I have never had anything come anywhere close to clogging and never heard anything or anyone having problems. but yes, i do have DIY alarms. Water level auto shut offs. Water sensor alarms, etc.. Still dont feel comfortable? shut it off when you go on vacation. Me? I leave it running full blast.
@whydoineedahandle2698 жыл бұрын
That was a fast response! Keep up the good work. I guess in the case of an overflow it is much safer. I am imagining a system with a pump activated by a float switch where if that pump (or float switch) fails, the water will just keep filling the main tank and eventually start spillin gover the edge. I guess that is one reason to go for the piped overflow.
@scotteotty12378 жыл бұрын
+The king of DIY can i use some cut up plastic straws as filter media as i am concerned as i am getting a new expensive fish
@whydoineedahandle2698 жыл бұрын
That sounds like it wouldn't work very well. You need something with microporosity for a biofilter
@scotteotty12378 жыл бұрын
+Ian R i mean the crimpled part of a bendy straw
@paulsampugnaro69198 жыл бұрын
Awesome what can I say. Always look forward to your videos. As a matter of fact looking forward to the Silver Dollars new visitor which should be soon.
@MELODYMUNRO9 жыл бұрын
I would like to see you do one on adapting a hang on back filter to fit a tank rim with euro bracing ..please.
@1610ed8 жыл бұрын
hey Joey. I don't know if you answered this already. I am really wanting to do this. I have a wet/dry sump set up so the water would over flow to the sump. if I drill the sump for a drain at a specific level. I am concerned about a power outage my water level would go to the floor drain then when the power comes back on the pump would run dry and burn up. any ideas would be great.
@nurulhasantharola9 жыл бұрын
hi Joey I'm your big fan and I almost seen your all video your so helpfull
@ivankalabric10764 жыл бұрын
How much water should you drip if your water change routine is 50 percent a week? The same amount of more? For example for a 100 gallon tank, should you aim to drip 50 gallons a week which is some 7 gallons a day, or it has to be more?
@peterphillimore83516 жыл бұрын
Could you run the water up into a media bed and let the water drip into the tank from above.
@jpollonais8 жыл бұрын
Hello joey. There are a number of people who state that the activated carbon does not work to remove the chlorine/chloramine, your thoughts? also, it the housing for the carbon supposed to be partially submerged? from the way its set up in your vid it looks like when the tank is filled half of it will be submerged. if you cover all of these questions in your book lemme know and i'll jump on it.
@kinnadian9 жыл бұрын
If you have only chlorine and not chloramines in your water you don't need to pre-treat this at all, chlorine naturally gases off after 12-24 hours and as long as your drip system water change doesn't turn over a heck of a lot of water (eg
@BigBaconBig7 жыл бұрын
Another idea for people who don't want to drill their tank. You could use a float valve on the water coming in to keep it at the same level and use an aquarium controller with a small pump to drain a couple gallons of water multiple times a day. Then the water will auto top off to the same level and you wont have to worry about the pump failing and flooding your house, if it fails it will just stop draining water. You just have to be confident in the float valve on the input.
@ThePsycomac9 жыл бұрын
I was looking into air diffusers and found several for several thousands of dollars. Would you suggest a DIY way to approximate an air diffuser for better air to water combination.
@brucesundberg88997 жыл бұрын
Joey, since I live in drought stricken California, I have to ask... is there a way to "recondition" the used tank water and reuse it again?
@seelsie8 жыл бұрын
so the drip system replaces evaporating water? or do you need to get water out of the tank manualy? and can i put a jerry can or something under the tank because i dont have running water close by the tank?
@oAROWANAo4 жыл бұрын
Is activated carbon being used to treat the water like this a sufficient replacement for seachem prime? Will it do the same thing?
@fatboy1177 жыл бұрын
Hey can you try aquaponics to see how it can clean the water?
@bentlikeitsmaker9 жыл бұрын
you could also put a carbon block before the presure regulator and with the slow flow they could last upto a year
@chisomsmith85116 жыл бұрын
My well water has ammonia in it any ideas on treating before water changes or will it help feed the beneficial bacteria?
@diegovasquez64096 жыл бұрын
Chisom Smith Add a bunch of live stem plants like Anachris. They are very good at cleaning the water.
@aquarist8 жыл бұрын
You're literally my favorite KZbinr right now lol
@eaglefence68206 жыл бұрын
My well/tap water has a PH of 8.0. How would you recommend I use a drip system while keeping the PH at a lower consistent level?
@nuellynuelly8 жыл бұрын
You are the man joe!
@thekingofdiy9 жыл бұрын
How to never do water changes - IMPROVED step by step Get the ultimate DIY book ► thekingofdiy.com Follow me ► facebook.com/uarujoey DIY bulkhead ► goo.gl/6hyU2e DIY float switch ► goo.gl/B6Wsnk Original drip system video ► goo.gl/zLLWPu My aquarium philosophy ► goo.gl/wq3Afc Crystal clear water changes ► goo.gl/RHyKQY THE BIG FISH DEAL ► thekingofdiy.com/cca/
@1997debbie9 жыл бұрын
This is what I love about your channel Joey the way you explain everything and it's so well thought out. Thank you so much, oh your last two Thursday videos with your children have been the best, hope to see a project with them again soon. Bye for now.
@Fermion9118 жыл бұрын
Would I actually need to change the water if I had a big aquarium (say 1000 litres and more) and a lot of plants in it? I always thought that that works like a self-cleaning ecosystem.
@Fermion9118 жыл бұрын
For the US people: 1000 litres = 264 US gallons :)
@curvalisiouscurves55797 жыл бұрын
The king of DIY um idk if you'll get my message but I live in the caribbean and want to start a aquarium at home do I still need water heaters??? Cuz I mean my island pretty hot on its own already to b specific um Dominica not Hati n Dominican Republic jus isle of dominica 😐😐😐😐😐 pple confuse d name
@jackiescorpio63597 жыл бұрын
It depends on what types of fish you're planning on. I don't use a heater and i live in New England. Ive got easy fish (guppies, mollies etc) however during cold months my tank is sitting close to a heater. My water is always between 67-70 . i hope that helps until someone with more knowledge answers you ; /
@CurtisBHertz9 жыл бұрын
I've been running a drip system for 2 years all because of your previous video, and I'll never go back to regular water changes if I don't have too.
@jpollonais9 жыл бұрын
+Head Hertz do you live on a well also or do you use the carbon?
@CurtisBHertz9 жыл бұрын
+Justin Pollonais unfortunately my water is treated with chlorine, so I must use a carbon block.
@jpollonais9 жыл бұрын
+Head Hertz ok can I ask you which carbon block you use, how long it last, how you installed it and how effective it is. please :3
@CurtisBHertz9 жыл бұрын
+Justin Pollonais I use a 2 foot section of 3 inch PVC filled with poly fill and 5lbs carbon, which was upgraded from a smaller version. I've had no troubles with it other then replacing the carbon about once a year with the small version which was on a 150g tank w/ 1 Oscar and 2 Plecos. Carbon can filter out more then just chlorine so carbon could be replace sooner or later than mine. I expect my larger version to last 2-3 years, possibly more. My water is from surface lake water which is treated. Low metals and contaminates = less time replacing media. Over all I'm happy I'm able to use a drip system and have no complaints.
@jpollonais9 жыл бұрын
Thanks man
@megalucariogaming95939 жыл бұрын
Does the carbon get rid of ammonia and chlorine together?
@kchstudiophx98438 жыл бұрын
Joey, when I was a kid. the fish room my brother had , had two 55g Rubbermaid trashcans. A 24 hr. period of time to let the chlorine to evaporate. Also today I just swish my hand thought it, and my arm takes the chlorine hit. and the fish are good. So is this a good way to treat the water?..
@nurulhasantharola9 жыл бұрын
hi joey i have a question for you that I have got a Amazon plant for my aquarium do it grow in gravel or I buy sand for it
@irubzz72734 жыл бұрын
I have plants in Gravel and gonna change to sand, is sand better for plants? Or do they NEED special substarte? I have a amazone Sword i think and i think what is called moneyworth