I’ve been looking to add redundancy and safety to my heater system. I haven’t had any serious problems in many years, but I know lots of people have and I’m looking to be pro-active.
Currently:
- 500W Won Bros titanium heater without a thermostat plugged into Apex. Apex controls the on/off. No second control system. No second heater.
- My tank is a RSR750 (200g total), rimless, with lots of surface flow.
- The heater actually draws 650W according to the Apex. Not sure about the significance of this. During the winter when the house is as cold as I let it get, it is on half the time at most, so it is a little more than I need. When I look at the average power consumption in the winter from the heater it is about 250W, 300W at night.
What I’ve read for safety:
- Better to have 2 heaters half the power each so if there is a failure (on or off) of 1 heater you are still ok.
- Better to have 2 different control mechanisms, one that controls the daily cycles and another set to kill power if it gets stuck on and overheats by a couple degrees.
- The heaters with bimetal contacts are the most likely to fail on. Digital controller is more reliable.
- I much prefer titanium to glass. They seem more reliable and much less likely to break, leak, or otherwise have a catastrophic failure.
- People say replace your heaters every year, but I get the impression that is for the classic glass bimetal contact ones. I’d rather get good heaters and controllers and not have to change them every year.
My plan:
- Switch to 2 smaller titanium heaters, maybe 250W or 300W each.
- Have my Apex be 1 of the 2 controller mechanisms, and either an integrated or separate controller be the 2nd.
My questions:
- The integrated controller mechanism on all the titanium heaters I’ve seen get ok to bad reviews. I don’t want something unreliable or inaccurate. Also would like to avoid one that is constantly shutting itself off before the tank reaches temp just because the sensor is on the tube. Do you guys know of any integrated heater/controllers that are accurate and reliable?
- For external controllers, there are several on the market. I’d probably get 2, 1 for each heater. Considering the ink-bird since it gets good reviews. Ranco gets glowing reviews but I’m not interested in starting with parts and doing electrical work. The Finnex separate controllers get so-so reviews. If it is designed for saltwater use and I don’t have to do any DIY that is worth a lot to me. Any suggestions?
- For titanium heaters, I’ve been happy with my Won, but they don’t seem to be popular. Finnex is the most popular but there are some complaints about voltage leak and failure. Are there some you guys like?
- Do the digital controllers like the integrated ones or the external (like Ink-Bird, Ranco, or Finnex) deal well with lots of power cycling like would happen with using the Apex as the primary controller and the other controller as backup? I can’t find any info on this online, despite being a pretty important question in my mind.
- Or would you suggest have the separate controller be the primary with the Apex as the failsafe backup? The 2 downsides to this are that the control probably isn’t as precise, and you can’t set Apex alarms for when current draw doesn’t match expected.
- I was also thinking one of the 2 heaters would be the primary, set to the temps I want, and the second would only kick on if the primary can’t keep up, like 1 degree colder. The idea being there would be fewer cycles and the secondary heater and controller would see a lot less wear and be ready when needed. Any thoughts?
Thanks!
John
Currently:
- 500W Won Bros titanium heater without a thermostat plugged into Apex. Apex controls the on/off. No second control system. No second heater.
- My tank is a RSR750 (200g total), rimless, with lots of surface flow.
- The heater actually draws 650W according to the Apex. Not sure about the significance of this. During the winter when the house is as cold as I let it get, it is on half the time at most, so it is a little more than I need. When I look at the average power consumption in the winter from the heater it is about 250W, 300W at night.
What I’ve read for safety:
- Better to have 2 heaters half the power each so if there is a failure (on or off) of 1 heater you are still ok.
- Better to have 2 different control mechanisms, one that controls the daily cycles and another set to kill power if it gets stuck on and overheats by a couple degrees.
- The heaters with bimetal contacts are the most likely to fail on. Digital controller is more reliable.
- I much prefer titanium to glass. They seem more reliable and much less likely to break, leak, or otherwise have a catastrophic failure.
- People say replace your heaters every year, but I get the impression that is for the classic glass bimetal contact ones. I’d rather get good heaters and controllers and not have to change them every year.
My plan:
- Switch to 2 smaller titanium heaters, maybe 250W or 300W each.
- Have my Apex be 1 of the 2 controller mechanisms, and either an integrated or separate controller be the 2nd.
My questions:
- The integrated controller mechanism on all the titanium heaters I’ve seen get ok to bad reviews. I don’t want something unreliable or inaccurate. Also would like to avoid one that is constantly shutting itself off before the tank reaches temp just because the sensor is on the tube. Do you guys know of any integrated heater/controllers that are accurate and reliable?
- For external controllers, there are several on the market. I’d probably get 2, 1 for each heater. Considering the ink-bird since it gets good reviews. Ranco gets glowing reviews but I’m not interested in starting with parts and doing electrical work. The Finnex separate controllers get so-so reviews. If it is designed for saltwater use and I don’t have to do any DIY that is worth a lot to me. Any suggestions?
- For titanium heaters, I’ve been happy with my Won, but they don’t seem to be popular. Finnex is the most popular but there are some complaints about voltage leak and failure. Are there some you guys like?
- Do the digital controllers like the integrated ones or the external (like Ink-Bird, Ranco, or Finnex) deal well with lots of power cycling like would happen with using the Apex as the primary controller and the other controller as backup? I can’t find any info on this online, despite being a pretty important question in my mind.
- Or would you suggest have the separate controller be the primary with the Apex as the failsafe backup? The 2 downsides to this are that the control probably isn’t as precise, and you can’t set Apex alarms for when current draw doesn’t match expected.
- I was also thinking one of the 2 heaters would be the primary, set to the temps I want, and the second would only kick on if the primary can’t keep up, like 1 degree colder. The idea being there would be fewer cycles and the secondary heater and controller would see a lot less wear and be ready when needed. Any thoughts?
Thanks!
John