I live about 30 mins away from New Orleans.
I have now come to the conclusion, that it is not possiable to keep an aquarium of any sort with out a gas generator and a battery powered air pump.
If you can live in N.O. and you got an reef tank, you need a generator. Not some cheap one either. Invest into a $250+ generator. Strive to get one that produces as many watts as possiable.
I have two modes for my tank:
Normal Operation Mode and Generator Life Support Mode
Normal Operation is everything running, everything that uses electricity.
Generator Life Support Mode is like all things you take for granted.
You do not realize how many watts you pull from your whole setup, until you do not have enough power to run a Maxi-Jet powerhead.
This means: No Protien Skimmer, no powerheads, calcium reactor, very little lights, or any other special effects in your tank.
I had to evacuate 100 miles away from my precious and I had to sneak back into the place where I live (the police were not allowing anyone to come home, for our saftey, which is reasonable) after the storm passed. I set up my tank for Life Support systems only and hoped for the best. My generator could not run my tank, because the generator was too weak.
I ended up taking a chunk of my liverock which contained most of best corals and putting it into a JBJ Nano Cube, which uses little over a couple hundred, with the lights on.
I saved it though. I only had a 2 inch Slimer die, and a Yellow Jaw Gobie, who got so scared, he commited suicide by going into my overflow U-Tube.
I have now come to the conclusion, that it is not possiable to keep an aquarium of any sort with out a gas generator and a battery powered air pump.
If you can live in N.O. and you got an reef tank, you need a generator. Not some cheap one either. Invest into a $250+ generator. Strive to get one that produces as many watts as possiable.
I have two modes for my tank:
Normal Operation Mode and Generator Life Support Mode
Normal Operation is everything running, everything that uses electricity.
Generator Life Support Mode is like all things you take for granted.
You do not realize how many watts you pull from your whole setup, until you do not have enough power to run a Maxi-Jet powerhead.
This means: No Protien Skimmer, no powerheads, calcium reactor, very little lights, or any other special effects in your tank.
I had to evacuate 100 miles away from my precious and I had to sneak back into the place where I live (the police were not allowing anyone to come home, for our saftey, which is reasonable) after the storm passed. I set up my tank for Life Support systems only and hoped for the best. My generator could not run my tank, because the generator was too weak.
I ended up taking a chunk of my liverock which contained most of best corals and putting it into a JBJ Nano Cube, which uses little over a couple hundred, with the lights on.
I saved it though. I only had a 2 inch Slimer die, and a Yellow Jaw Gobie, who got so scared, he commited suicide by going into my overflow U-Tube.