djconn said:I have never seem anthing like that before. That is crazy.
Where is that located? It looks like a coffeshop or something. Really cool! Thanks for sharing.
Unfortunately it's just a site to sell their book. There's no info on where the cafe is that the pics were taken at.Lester said:djconn said:I have never seem anthing like that before. That is crazy.
Where is that located? It looks like a coffeshop or something. Really cool! Thanks for sharing.
maybe this website could help
http://www.fishighway.com
cheers
Actually this does work, many of us have it hanging on a tank already. Think of this thing as nothing but a huge U-tube for an overflow. Once the tube is full of water it stays full, even if power is lost and water isn't flowing through it the water in the tube doesn't fall back into the two portions of the overflow box. As long as both ends of the U-tube remain under the surface of the water none of the water in the U-tube will flow back into the box. Same principle applies here. Just on a much larger scale.mihkaail said:Hi people
was looking at this yesterday and i just realised something: if the tanks are at eye level, and the corridors are up on the ceiling, it cant possibly be true. Remember in school when they said that liquids would always be at the same level in a container?
If the highway was built, and filled to the top of the ceiling corridors and ramps, water would be gushing out from the tanks. Unless, of course they were all one large container, in which case the greatly reduced contact surface with air would lead to the fish's premature demise.
And besides, which fish would seriously continue swimming the nearly vertical corridors after a few hours. The cafe would end up with several isolated groups of organisms.
Would be interesting id it did work though.
Yeah, in the faq on the website they said the first patent application in the US for this was in 1877.EcoSystem said:I thought of something like that when i was a kid too...systems like that have been a round for a while....i have seen tank to tank pipes and ones that ran along walls and ones built into walls.
I like a Habitrail for fish...lol
-Eco
I've seen several pics of people installing tubes like this between tanks. But nothing quite this high, or long. Usually just a couple tanks sitting relatively close to each other. As for the distance upwards that a fish will swim, that isn't any big deal at all. Most natural reefs range between 2-3feet below the surface to 80ft easy. The fish aren't gonna be bothered at all by swiming up a tube 7-10ft.mihkaail said:haha, cant believe i didnt think of that, so embarassing.
Incysor, did you say some people have it? do the fish really use it often? in regular size tanks they might cos the distance upwards to swim isnt so great.