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Drilling into wood to make it easier to waterlog?


PineSong
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Wondering if anyone has tried this? I have a dense chunk of wood that I want to add to my 29. Last time I waterlogged it, it took about three months of being held under water by a brick in a bucket before it stopped floating. 

It has been dry on my shelf for a few months and I am impatient to get it in my tank for the shrimp. 

I was thinking I could drill a bunch of little holes in the backside and perhaps accomplish two things— faster water logging and additional shrimplet hides. 
has anyone done this?

I don’t want to accidentally make it more buoyant, and my understanding of physics is limited. Bug Bites for scale.

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On 1/1/2023 at 9:53 AM, DaveO said:

If it were mine i would do the old [drill the slate to the bottom] trick. It's such a nice piece of wood, I would not want to damage it in any way.

It is a lovely piece of wood, it is so pretty I kind of hated taking it off my bookshelf to put it back in the tank.
I don’t have any slate 😞. I can check at the stone yard where I usually get my stone but it’s hard for me to get there so that won’t be instant gratification! Dangit.

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A piece of tile works well too. 

My thought on the wood is drilling holes will make it lighter allowing the buoyancy to have greater effect. 

In theory, it makes sense, but I would hate for you to have a holy piece of wood intent on walking on water for another three months.

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On 1/1/2023 at 10:51 AM, pseudomugil said:

A piece of tile works well too. 

My thought on the wood is drilling holes will make it lighter allowing the buoyancy to have greater effect. 

In theory, it makes sense, but I would hate for you to have a holy piece of wood intent on walking on water for another three months.

Ooh, tile is easy to get! Thank you. 

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On 1/1/2023 at 11:16 AM, FLFishChik said:

What about just filling a bucket or tote and letting it soak a few days until it sinks in it’s own?

It took 3 months last time… I don’t think a few days will do it. Not sure what kind of wood it is but it’s very heavy for its size so I guess it’s dense. 

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I'd be worried that more holes could also mean more air pockets. 

I have a cheap 3 gallon enamel pot that I've used for boiling driftwood - as it will leave a stain. That's what finally got my pieces to sink. 

-- not related --

@JJenna if you want to follow a topic, you need to use the "Follow" button towards the top right of the screen, commenting won't send you notifications for a post you've commented on (at least for me 🤷‍♂️). 

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If you don't have slate, you could still use any other kind of stone. Either one big enough to weigh it down, super glued to the wood, or multiple smaller ones. If you don't like the looks of the stone(s), maybe you can bury them under the substrate. Or you can do what I did, which was to balance a stone on top for a couple weeks. It looked goofy, but it worked.

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I had wood soaking for months before I put it in my 100 G nanofish tank, then still had to attach it to rocks to keep it down.  Then when I finally released the rocks from their zip ties, they still floated after nearly a year in water (over 9 months in the tank and weighted down).  So I finally drilled the pieces and attached them to slate pieces.  If you don’t have slate (Amazon has small slate charcuterie boards that were reasonably priced), then tile will work.  Pick a tile color that matches your substrate and it will practically disappear even if you don’t bury it deep.

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