Well, second hand! New to me. Have just given it a more thorough clean and descale after soaking in vinegar with paper towels, then going over it with a carefully angled razorblade.
Using phone to upload pics, then will switch to laptop for more detail (I'm such a luddite, and hate typing on phone!)
It's a cute little 30L/7g tank, came with a bunch of mini filters & a heater I need to clean up and test.
The light in the lid works, and is the main reason I was looking for another 5-10g tank for my new betta. The tank he's currently in is my 12.5g QT/grow out tank, and I know from long experience that no live plants can survive in it for long. Not even java fern or duckweed, which are unkillable in my other tanks.
So I picked up this one. Measures 29/27/39cms, so 30 Litres or roughly 6.7g, not accounting for hardscape & substrate displacement, so thinking of it as a 5g really.
Hope it's not too small for him... if I do find it seems too cramped for him, then I'll likely upgrade him to a ten and use this for something else. Will see how he likes it once fully set up and he's moved to it! But the 12.5g isn't one I want as anything but a QT or nursery tank - much prefer to be able to grow live plants in a permanent set up! This will also be a cute little kitchen tank.
I do have a black background I can cut to size as well.
So first photo is the light which is built into the front part of the tank lid.
The back part, I'm really curious about!
Following pics are the back part of the tank hood. Why I'm curious, they're clearly built this way for a purpose, and they look exactly like a mini-version of the in-hood filter box holders that are on my dad's ancient 57g tank. Where a pump would send water through the two huge boxes packed with media in the hood above the tank, then through outlet pipes back into the tank.
The pump on dad's old tank packed up long ago, I don't have the know how to rig a new one, but perhaps could get a small one for this? Except no media boxes came with this one - but no reason bagged ceramics, sponge and filter floss couldn't be added, right?
Here it is closed and opened:
And those holes look very much like a spray like outlet water return:
Will add some pics in next comment from my dad's ancient tank I've inherited and plan to tear down.
But especially those who've been in the hobby for a while and seen the type of in-hood filtration systems I'm talking about, or are good at rigging their own filters out of parts like @Essjay @GaryE @Oldspartan @Magnum Man @Back in the fold @Colin_T
Would love any ideas, tips and tricks! Especially with it being a nano tank, while it would be easy enough to add a typical bubble or internal filter, it would also be space saving and likely better filtration capacity if I could get a pump that would get this thing working again, right? Unless it would cost a bomb and be a nightmare...! But hey, never hurts to ask, right?
Using phone to upload pics, then will switch to laptop for more detail (I'm such a luddite, and hate typing on phone!)
It's a cute little 30L/7g tank, came with a bunch of mini filters & a heater I need to clean up and test.
The light in the lid works, and is the main reason I was looking for another 5-10g tank for my new betta. The tank he's currently in is my 12.5g QT/grow out tank, and I know from long experience that no live plants can survive in it for long. Not even java fern or duckweed, which are unkillable in my other tanks.
So I picked up this one. Measures 29/27/39cms, so 30 Litres or roughly 6.7g, not accounting for hardscape & substrate displacement, so thinking of it as a 5g really.
Hope it's not too small for him... if I do find it seems too cramped for him, then I'll likely upgrade him to a ten and use this for something else. Will see how he likes it once fully set up and he's moved to it! But the 12.5g isn't one I want as anything but a QT or nursery tank - much prefer to be able to grow live plants in a permanent set up! This will also be a cute little kitchen tank.
I do have a black background I can cut to size as well.
So first photo is the light which is built into the front part of the tank lid.
The back part, I'm really curious about!
Following pics are the back part of the tank hood. Why I'm curious, they're clearly built this way for a purpose, and they look exactly like a mini-version of the in-hood filter box holders that are on my dad's ancient 57g tank. Where a pump would send water through the two huge boxes packed with media in the hood above the tank, then through outlet pipes back into the tank.
The pump on dad's old tank packed up long ago, I don't have the know how to rig a new one, but perhaps could get a small one for this? Except no media boxes came with this one - but no reason bagged ceramics, sponge and filter floss couldn't be added, right?
Here it is closed and opened:
And those holes look very much like a spray like outlet water return:
Will add some pics in next comment from my dad's ancient tank I've inherited and plan to tear down.
But especially those who've been in the hobby for a while and seen the type of in-hood filtration systems I'm talking about, or are good at rigging their own filters out of parts like @Essjay @GaryE @Oldspartan @Magnum Man @Back in the fold @Colin_T
Would love any ideas, tips and tricks! Especially with it being a nano tank, while it would be easy enough to add a typical bubble or internal filter, it would also be space saving and likely better filtration capacity if I could get a pump that would get this thing working again, right? Unless it would cost a bomb and be a nightmare...! But hey, never hurts to ask, right?
Attachments
Last edited: