Heater for 2.5G

naturestee

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Nov 6, 2003
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Hi all,

I've been lurking for a few weeks and now I have a question of my own. I have a betta in a 2.5 gallon Minibow setup. My apartment is cooler than he would like, now that it's gotten so cold here (northern Minnesota, brr!). I've seen heaters for 2-5 gallon aquariums at Walmart- do these work? Are they of any decent quality, or is it an absolute waste?
 
Welcome to AC

Tanks that small are really susceptible to temperature variations. I'd stay away from generic heaters and get a 50w Tronic or Ebo Jager. They cost twice as much, but that's still only ~$15.

You may also want to keep the tank away from windows & air-conditioning/heating units.

Hope that helps

<edit> The Ebo Jager 50w heater is 9" long, the Tronic is 7"
 
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Agree with superjohnny. ESPECIALLY with a smaller aquarium, you want a good quality heater that maintains temperature.
 
I had heard that you shouldn't have a heater that is made to heat a bigger tank than the one it's in. Would there be anything I'd have to watch out for- ie overheating?

Thanks for your help!
 
The problem is that there are no heaters made for a tank thats 2.5 gallons. A heater that gets stuck on the 'on' position will overheat the tank very quickly. Thats why it is recommended to purchase a good quality heater like a tronic or ebo.
 
I've used the little 2-5 gallon heater from Walmart. They last only a short time. Mine got stuck in the on position after about 4 months.
I use mine in a 2.5 gallon Mini-bow and it is very inconsistant with the temp. It is good at not letting it get below a certain temp but conversely, it usually gets too high. If I left it plugged in, it would maintain a temp of about 82-84 degrees no matter how low a temp it started at. It's supposed to only heat 4 degrees so I start with a temp of 74 to try to get it up to 78. It will stay at 78 for about a day before it goes up to 82-84. Even if I start with 70, it will eventually get too high. I end up just unplugging it and re-plugging it when needed (pain in the ***).
I find leaving the light on during the day keeps it warm enough (in New Hampshire) and during cold winter nights, I may plug it in. However, after moving the tank into the kitchen, I hardly have to plug it in...it stays so warm in there.

Melanie
 
The cheap heaters are unsafe for small tanks. I had one in my 5 gallon tank, and it would get up to 86--way too warm. Water thats too warm is worse than water that's a bit cool, since the cooler water at least has lots of oxygen. I took the heater out, and while the tank does vary some, it avoids the high extremes and the temperature changes are gradual, similar to a pool cooling at night and warming back up in the sun. My betta and ottos have not had any disease problems. The only thing I've noticed is they are a bit sluggish when the light first comes on.
 
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