The heater in my main aquarium stopped working and the replacement arrived yesterday afternoon. I also bought a digital thermometer, the kind with a probe which sits inside the tank and the display outside the tank.
I've always used the ones with the liquid inside that stick to the inside of the tank with a sucker but got fed up with replacing them when the suckers stopped working and the the thermometer just pirouetted round the tank and couldn't be read. I also have 3 thermometers of the long thin type - one for the new water at water changes, one in the kitchen from when I had a breadmaker and needed to check the temp of the water, and one in the bedroom for the summer for when it gets too warm for my eye drops. My husband also has a digital thermometer in the room where he keeps his violins and violas.
Once the new heater arrived I set the dial a bit lower than I want and put it in the tank together with the new digital thermometer, the aquarium long thin thermometer and one of those where the sucker no longer works. None of the thermometers gave the same reading. So this morning I gathered several of them and placed them side by side for half an hour. The mechanical ones are laid on a wooden trivet with the bulbs sticking out in the air, the aquarium digital has the probe suspended from a fish food tub so that the probe is also in the air, husband's digital is on the trivet.
Husband's digital - 17.4
Aquarium digital - 17.7
aquarium long - 15.5
kitchen long - 17.5
bedroom long - 17.5
'sucker' aquarium -17.0
all degrees C
The worrying one is the long aquarium thermometer. That's the one I use for the new water and the one to check if the heater is set right. So the aquarium temp has always been higher than I thought.
I have now thrown away the one I've been using for the fish tank and I'll use the kitchen one instead for the new water - since I no longer have a breadmaker I haven't used it in ages. And use the digital one in the tank.
And I've turned the dial on the heater down.
The moral of this tale is - don't trust the accuracy of any type of thermometer until you have compared the reading with several others.
I've always used the ones with the liquid inside that stick to the inside of the tank with a sucker but got fed up with replacing them when the suckers stopped working and the the thermometer just pirouetted round the tank and couldn't be read. I also have 3 thermometers of the long thin type - one for the new water at water changes, one in the kitchen from when I had a breadmaker and needed to check the temp of the water, and one in the bedroom for the summer for when it gets too warm for my eye drops. My husband also has a digital thermometer in the room where he keeps his violins and violas.
Once the new heater arrived I set the dial a bit lower than I want and put it in the tank together with the new digital thermometer, the aquarium long thin thermometer and one of those where the sucker no longer works. None of the thermometers gave the same reading. So this morning I gathered several of them and placed them side by side for half an hour. The mechanical ones are laid on a wooden trivet with the bulbs sticking out in the air, the aquarium digital has the probe suspended from a fish food tub so that the probe is also in the air, husband's digital is on the trivet.
Husband's digital - 17.4
Aquarium digital - 17.7
aquarium long - 15.5
kitchen long - 17.5
bedroom long - 17.5
'sucker' aquarium -17.0
all degrees C
The worrying one is the long aquarium thermometer. That's the one I use for the new water and the one to check if the heater is set right. So the aquarium temp has always been higher than I thought.
I have now thrown away the one I've been using for the fish tank and I'll use the kitchen one instead for the new water - since I no longer have a breadmaker I haven't used it in ages. And use the digital one in the tank.
And I've turned the dial on the heater down.
The moral of this tale is - don't trust the accuracy of any type of thermometer until you have compared the reading with several others.