the most underrated fish room build video!! i've watched so many over the past 4 years and this is soo great. so many amazing tips for people who don't have any idea what to do and the filming of the plumping installation is impeccable! I love the editing too. I can't wait for an update!
Thanks mate, be sure to tell your friends! I have changed things around a little, and have finished the air system and battery back up. I will be posting an update soon.
22:13, that was hilarious. I did not know Australian fish keepers where this straight faced funny. I am hooked to what Australian Aquarist is doing and you also have earned a new sub!
I love this video. I have been using one of those plastic little doohickey’s for a couple of years now to fill my tanks from the laundry tap, awesome. I hate to say but I have 4 fish shops within 25 minutes in Brisbane so I am so impressed you do what you where you do. Legend.
So what you are trying to say is that you stole my idea a couple of years before I even thought of it? Not cool Rob, not cool. Either is bragging about how many shops you have close by while I have to do more miles than the Leyland brothers just to get to one. Glad you enjoyed the video mate. 😁
@@Gilsfishroom what can I say, I’m a bad man. Seriously I am loving seeing your fishroom come together. I was only allowed my 5x2 foot until I accidentally set up a little 4 foot. I would be pushing my to go further but one day….maybe…you never know. Cheers.
Very nice setup! Chris from Stubbs Aquatics mentioned your channel so I came to check it out and your sense of humor is awesome! I’ve subbed 👍 and will enjoy going back to watch your other videos! 👍
Dear Gil: It is gratifying, to see an expert builder set up a fish room, properly. Many “fish rooms” I’ve seen look like laboratories; no attention, whatsoever, to detail or aesthetics. I do hope I’ll be able to breed black neon tetra (Hyphessobrycon herbertaxelrodi), in future. At the moment, mine are in a community tank, where all the eggs released, during mating, are immediately devoured. Thank you for sharing this, entertaining and fascinating build. It was definitely worth the wait and your Betta splendens is simply gorgeous. I’m sure this upload will come in useful, for those, with the expertise, equipment, and patience. All my best, Sincerely, E. J. Brinegar
Thanks E.J, I wanted this room to be a calming place to be, therefore it needs to be orderly. I didn't set out to breed the black neons, although after seeing them spawn I intentionally left one end of that tank untouched and overgrown in the hope that I might be lucky and have some fry survive. Thanks again for your comment mate.
@@pelhamsaquatics The beauty of me holding the camera is that you can't see my lounge room. It looks like a fish tank shanty town with small grow out and quarantine tanks stuck anywhere I could find space.
You have mad skills mate, cannot find my socks.. definitely knocked them away!😂 I’m so not handy with tools, seeing this is quite awe inspiring to put it simply. Such a wonderful fishroom you have created! P.s the water temperature mixing is next level 😮
I'm happy to see that Washing Machine Hose Bracket (available for 10 easy payments of .50) made an appearance 😉. Really ingenious how you bent the pvc pipe, and I hope that hot/cold water manifold with the shower temp gauge does hold up over time because it's really brilliant. Loved the butterfly and the baby doll, I thoroughly enjoyed all of this! Beautiful betta and cute little black neon, too 😊. Really looking forward to seeing more and hope you're having a nice weekend! 🙂👍👍
Drilling holes would scare the 💩 out of me. Good thinking on cutting the bulkheads . You really put a lot of planning into this Gil. Awful cold at 10... Lol. 👶 hahaha That temp gauge is amazing Loving the plumbing system Nice Aussie dash across the road .. now that is a long way to get fish ...
This was such a great video! I’ve taking notes as I prepare for a fish room build of my own. Lots of great tips and some laughs in this video. Much appreciated, cheers
Filling the pipe with Salt if you dont have compressed air works aswell Just dont use sand because you could end up with small pieces in the plastic were salt can be washed out Great video and good Aussie humour
I have not tried salt, although I have tried sand. I found the compressed air worked really well, because if you get a kink or other imperfection, just heat that area and the air will push the kink out.
Loads more excellent tip in this one. Anyone asking me about building a fish room I'll just send them right to this series i reckon. That is some trek for fish right enough. Glad you didn't get perished or stuck in the mud. Don't know where the rumour about me playing the bagpipes came from but it is totally untrue by the way. Reckon I'd annoy myself if i started playing them. 😆 Thanks for the mention and the giggle but. Nice Betta mate. I go for Jimmy Don't Play The Pipes as a name haha..
Great video Gil, absolute skills you have mate could do with you coming to my fish room lol, the hack of the washing machine clamp is 100% top class. There must be some Geos in there and lastly i promise not to moan about my drives for fish again 😩😂
Thanks Paul. There will definitely be Geos. The majority of the trip is driving in a straight line, so 5 hours for me is probably easier than half an hour for you.
Nice setup, I'm in WA around 4 hours out of Perth and 5 hours away from my favourite aquarium shop. My tanks are a bit more spread out as the place we bought has a 6m x 6m games room, that's mine and the wife has the rest of the house lol. For filling my tanks I mix the water in a 120L plastic drum with the top removed and when it's up to temperature and de-chlorinated and de-chloramined, I use a submersible drum pump to re-fill the tank(s). I have a toilet cistern filler valve on the other end of a garden hose from the pump, I just hang that on the side of the tank and it cuts off the flow if (when) I get distracted. To partially empty the tank I use a 600lph submersible that utilises the filler hose to drain to the veggie garden. The pump has a 600ml bottle minus the bottom on the intake side with a fish net over the cut end to prevent fish getting sucked in, I set the height of the cut end of the bottle to prevent me over emptying, I leave this on when re-filling without the cistern valve as it spreads the outflow and doesn't disturb the plants or gravel, I just have to be very careful of distractions. I have been using "washing machine" drain hose sink hangers for a long time, and for other uses around the garden as well, the ones off dishwashers are usually a touch smaller and a better fit if you can get hold of them, the rubbish tip in my country town is a good source of supply for those and quite a few other bits and pieces, the price is spot-on too.
Sounds like you are on top of it! I have a small float valve usually used for things like stock troughs that I intended to do the same thing, but just haven't got there yet. Did you make some sort of bracket to hold it in place on top of the tank?
Thanks mate. Yeah, that power point under the sink is a pain, and I had to change the plumbing to get away from it. It's all connected to a safety switch in case the worst should happen.
I've never tried salt, although I have bent pvc using sand. I found the compressed air worked better, because if the pipe kinks you heat that part and the air pushes the kink out. Make for a smoother bend.
haha, nice! your setup is amazing! 3 hours away from your local fish store? 😦 My name suggestion for your Betta is Steve 😅 can't wait to see what you will put in those tanks!
В очках и кепке похож на старого негоду 😂 Лайк подписка PS да в россии так дорогу можно было и не перейти, надо смотреть в три стороны... влево, вправо и вверх на всякий. Бобра в хату 😊
That's a great system to control the water intake temp for places with a huge climate variation, not a thing for me in northern Brazil, temps always the same, but great idea. If I may, whats the purpose of the brace away from the edges of the tank ? Feels like it would be less structurally safe, and removes the "safety corners" where fish usually try to jump from, following the edges of the tanks
I would love to live somewhere with a climate like yours! I didn't make the tanks, but that is a pretty common design here. I've had tanks like these for years with no problems. You are correct about fish jumping out at the corners, so I use lids.
So just some weird local practice then, here some tank builders have a mania of doing the bottom of big tanks out of two (or more, I've seen up to 5 or 6) pieces of glass siliconed edge to edge, some claim it makes a more flexible bottom, but since it's a continuous seam on every other panel I don't really get how it's supposed to protect the tank from flexing, but oh well, it works still as well. I really just think the first guy did it to save on buying new glass and using spares, and all others just imitated it after some time
Really enjoyed this water change build...plenty in there to think about and work into my future plans. Just curious why you went with the u-bend PVC and bilge pump for the draining side of things, rather than another hole 50% down and a valve? Most people who go with PVC and a syphon do so cause they're nervous about drilling a tank (which you're obviously not haha).
I went that way because 1. I can drain other tanks that aren't on the rack. 2. Having a second bulkhead would add something else man made that would be visible. 3. The tap would be a bitch to reach, and I'm not as young and flexible as I once was. 4. It would limit what I could put in the tank. eg. The top left tank on the rack would have the drain amongst the rotala. 5. With the u bend I can see if any fry is getting sucked in. 6. I can easily swap the u bend for a gravel vac if I was so inclined. Also probably a few reasons that I have forgotten. Don't let that stop you from going that way if you want... 😊