My tank will be just fine for 12 hours without the return running. Less than idea, but everything should survive. And, since I get an email notification, I can either go home to fix it or ask someone to help. Same as if I'm on vacation. I can walk my tank sitter through unplugging the heater causing the problem (current monitored ports) and then restore flow.
My primary heater should be turned off by the controller at 78.3F and my backup heater should turn off at 77.3F. If the temp probe that controls my heaters fails low, or the outlet fails to deenergize, my return pump is a last ditch response to keep from cooking my tank.
This may work for you in Alabama, but today its -17 in Mn with windchill much lower, the house stays at 60f during the day and 70 when i get home. Heating the home during the day would be a giant waste of money and not an option.
I have my power heads that provide plenty of flow and air exchange. I keep my house at around 72F during the day so my DT would stay above that temperature. Not ideal, but should not be harmful.
I just went through this thought process after watching a BRS Live discussion where they mentioned Neptune doesn't recommend you ever plug an uncontrolled titanium heater directly in to the Apex.
I have a 90 gal with two Finnex 300w heaters, a primary and a back up. I had the primary hooked up directly to the Apex EB832, and the back up to a second EB832 through an Inkbird ITC-308. This setup has done fine for two years. The flaw in my rig was if the Apex temp probe failed or the relay controlling the heater outlet stuck "ON" on the primary, I could have cooked my tank. A tank can recover from colder temps, say 68, much better than hotter, say 90+. Also, one failed "ON" heater will get you overheated potentially killing your tank, where one failed "OFF" will just go to your backup.
for overheat protection and redundancy, I put a second controller on the primary heater, an Inkbird ITC -306T ($30 on Amazon). It's probably better suited for my heater only application and a few dollars less than the ITC-308 which is set up for a heater and chiller.
The minimum temp swing on the Inkbirds is 1 deg F, not near the 1/10th ° fidelity of the Apex. I got around it it by setting the Inkbird at 80 deg with a 2 deg swing. This means the Inkbird will power on it's outlet(s) at 78°, off at 80° I have my Apex set to power the outlet at 77.5° off at 78°. So... the outlet powers on at 77.5°, the Inkbird sensing the temp below 78° allows the heater to power up and draw power through the Inkbird outlet. It will now warm the tank to 78°, then Apex shuts off the EB832 outlet until the temp drops to 77.5° and continues that loop until the the heater is no longer needed (Summer), and protects against high temperature. With a separate (and calibrating probe) the Inkbird will power off at 80° should the Apex temp probe fail, or the outlet relay on the EB832 stick "ON". I have the backup set the same, but "ON" at a degree lower with a notification to let me know if it ever draws power, telling me the primary heater is failing/ has failed.
I'm sure it's not the only option, maybe not even the best option, but in my Apex setup, for $30 I now have redundant overheat protection on both heaters.
I have this ranco. It’s a bit more expensive because of the NEMA 4 enclosure, which is supposed to be more “water proof” enclosure, but I’m not sure you need it.
https://www.supplyhouse.com/sh/control/product/~product_id=ETC-241000-000
This is the nema 1 enclosure which is a bit cheaper.
https://www.supplyhouse.com/Ranco-E...e-Temperature-Control-w-Sensor-120-240V-Input
It may seem complicated to wire, but there are lots of videos tutorials online. Mostly by people who brew beer :).
I’ve owned both ranco and inkbird, and it’s a different level of quality and longevity. You should get shrink wrap or make a waterproof well for the ranco temp probe. It is technically not waterproof, but I hear some have used it fine for a long time without issues.
So you are saying the inkbird < ranco? I wish there was a 500w titanium that came with a controller build in, ugh...
