Randy Holmes-Farley said:
I'm not sure what criteria would be useful to show that draining water off of a plenum was a better procedure than a DSB alone, with or without a plenum.
What exactly are you guys proposing to use to say that it is a success?
Good question....
I know you are not a big believer in what an ORP meter shows, because there are so many variables and different readings for every tank.
I do believe the changes in ORP read out is indication of good and bad changes in tank chemistry.
The coral and fish appear much happier in a tank with an ORP reading of 350 to 400 compared to one at 200. I also know this is subjective, but my observation and a number of other reef keepers observation agree. Nearly every commercial aquarium uses ozone, and an ORP controller, to raise ORP levels. Many still believe you cannot keep a tank at its best without it. But, that is another topic.
Example: When I feed my tank ORP drop 30 or 40 points and then comes back up over the next few hours.
I had been using a declining ORP reading as an indiction if the tank is getting out of balance and water quality is dropping. When making a 15% water change the ORP would move back up and the response to change would happen quicker, than with a low ORP.
To me an ORP reading is like a looking at a barometer for the weather. Doesn't necessarily tell you everything but is a good indicator of change or rate of change.
Back to your point...."what will determine CPW is a success".
As I have posted, my tank experience has been, even with making 15% weekly water changes, to maintain an ORP setting of 350Mv, my ozone feed would cycle all day. When I was wasting only a half quart a day with CPW, ozone would still cycle all day.
When I increased my CPW rate to 1 gallon a day, my ORP stopped cycling. Not only stopped cycling but continued to climb to just under 400mv. It has virtually eliminated the feeding of ozone, which I have set at 350mv on the controller.
I know we can question the value of ORP and what this all means, but to me it is an indication that I am getting positive results.
Before my SPS would not open up and appeared to be struggling. My frog spawn was shrinking. They are now both keep their polyps open all day, appear to be growing, and in general the whole looks much better.
Why do I think CPW is the cause of this? Based on logic and data, waste concentrates in a DSB. CPW removes some of that concentrated waste and reduces the amount that migrates back to the top of the substrate by keeping the flow toward the bottom of the substrate and releasing build up.
How do I know this.....
1.The nitrate and phosphate in the waste is always much higher than what is in the water column.
2. If, instead of dumping the wasting fluid down the drain, I allow it back into the tank, my ORP meter drops over 100 points in a few minutes and takes almost a day to recover.
3. I am wasting only about 1/2 of what I was removing with water changes and getting improved ORP readings without ozone feed.
3. If I drop a few pods or newly hatched brine shrimp into what is being wasted they immediately die.
4. I know I have one more way of measuring and reacting to water quality; other than measuring Ca,Alk,Ph,Ni, Ammonia,etc.etc,etc. in trying to maintain life in a bottle.
It is logical if you remove the waste from where it appears to be concentrating, instead of simply pulling it from the water column, that you will have to remove less.
Chemical and biological chemistry and the what, how, and when is nice to know and understand. It may help you improve results. As more reef tank keepers apply CPW an start to develop more history and data, I am sure we will see further improvements.
The most important thing to me is always results.
As in a lab, sometimes you analysis what you have, even before you know exactly why you have it. Often the physical order of making a reaction is as or more important than the chemicals used. Experimenting with the variables to improve the results is what normally follows.
I think I learned this when I was ten years old watching a movie, in the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago, about the men and how they discovered aluminum and vulcanized rubber in kitchen labs.
