dont risk it

hud3339

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I put a mouse pad in my tank to quiet down my pump after a few people said it was ok to put it in there. The one I purchased had something in it and contaminated my tank. So don't take the risk. I found out that some lfs carry a pad that is made to be put under the pump. Hopefully this helps someone else out, learn from my mistake.
 
hud3339;720254 wrote: I put a mouse pad in my tank to quiet down my pump after a few people said it was ok to put it in there. The one I purchased had something in it and contaminated my tank. So don't take the risk. I found out that some lfs carry a pad that is made to be put under the pump. Hopefully this helps someone else out, learn from my mistake.
how long after you put the pad in did the first fish die?
 
I added the pad last night around 9 I came home the next day around 6 and all the fish were dead so less than 24 hours
 
Corals are starting to open back up. My blastamussa is the biggest I have ever seen it. And it was doing that before i put the carbon in there
 
Ok all corals are looking fine now, same with the crabs and snails. I guess it only effected the fish
 
Crazy! That sux to hear. I've used several mouse pads over the years to quiet down pumps.
 
1mbrews8;720338 wrote: very weird... so you put the pad under the return pump in the sump?

Yeah I put it under there to keep it a little more quiet, and it really helped
 
For some reason I wouldn't feel good about putting a mouse pad in my tank. It's seems like there could always be a chemical or adhesive that could leech.
 
It essential a DuPont Teflon or silacone coated mat was it the realy slick ones also check to se if it was made in China it could of had high grafite(sp?) Or lead.
Teflon silacone grafite and lead will poison your fish, corals and mobile inverts can take higher levels of these elements with out much damage.
if your gowing to use a mat to quiet pumps look in to food grade mat it looks like the stuff you line cabinets with but non leaching and safe to
I would wait a month at least before adding new fish. Maybe Do a 5gal wc every other day during that time. And if you realy won't to be safe remove your sump, media reactors, pumps and clean them replace all media,floss,bio material if you use it also you can change out the sand bed (suck out 1/6 every 4days git all of it out before adding new
I'm sorry for your fish losses hope every thing works out for you
 
falos;720386 wrote: It essential a DuPont Teflon or silacone coated mat was it the realy slick ones also check to se if it was made in China it could of had high grafite(sp?) Or lead.
Teflon silacone grafite and lead will poison your fish, corals and mobile inverts can take higher levels of these elements with out much damage.
if your gowing to use a mat to quiet pumps look in to food grade mat it looks like the stuff you line cabinets with but non leaching and safe to
I would wait a month at least before adding new fish. Maybe Do a 5gal wc every other day during that time. And if you realy won't to be safe remove your sump, media reactors, pumps and clean them replace all media,floss,bio material if you use it also you can change out the sand bed (suck out 1/6 every 4days git all of it out before adding new
I'm sorry for your fish losses hope every thing works out for you

Hate to disagree, but Teflon and silicone are inert polymers. Teflon is used as a non-stick coating in cooking pans. Silicone is used to glue our tanks together. (maybe you mean silicon, no 'e'?) Graphite is carbon (unactivated) which I've been walking around with a chunk in my hand since 8th grade. Lead is toxic, yes. Personally, I suspect something else. What would kill fish and not inverts? -JMHO
 
ichthyoid;720400 wrote: Hate to disagree, but Teflon and silicone are inert polymers. Teflon is used as a non-stick coating in cooking pans. Silicone is used to glue our tanks together. (maybe you mean silicon, no 'e'?) Graphite is carbon (unactivated) which I've been walking around with a chunk in my hand since 8th grade. Lead is toxic, yes. Personally, I suspect something else. What would kill fish and not inverts? -JMHO
I agree. It has only been 16 days since you put water in the system. I would stick to your original game plan and slow it down some. Don't make me drive over and give you one of those old man lectures:D
 
Man, I hate to hear that bud. :-(

In the spirit of learning from this, I have a question if you don't mind me stepping all over your thread. I am about to build a DIY Top Off. Because I am a cheap old fart, I found some micro-switches in our shop that I want to adapt as floats. My thoughts were to use a piece of rubber or just old fashioned cork as the actual floating mechanism. Can anyone think of why that may be a bad idea?
 
I am sorry to hear this. Thanks for sharing this with the group. I have heard of doing this and have even considered doing it myself, but now I will think twice.

I guess if there is a silver lining, all of your corals are doing well.
 
rdnelson99;720418 wrote: Man, I hate to hear that bud. :-(

In the spirit of learning from this, I have a question if you don't mind me stepping all over your thread. I am about to build a DIY Top Off. Because I am a cheap old fart, I found some micro-switches in our shop that I want to adapt as floats. My thoughts were to use a piece of rubber or just old fashioned cork as the actual floating mechanism. Can anyone think of why that may be a bad idea?

IMO you DON'T want a float switch to fail. DIYing something as cheap as a float switch isn't a great idea in my opinion.

Buy one that works, without the risk of DIY mistakes
 
SnowManSnow;720433 wrote: IMO you DON'T want a float switch to fail. DIYing something as cheap as a float switch isn't a great idea in my opinion.

Buy one that works, without the risk of DIY mistakes


That takes all the fun out of it. LOL
 
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