d-town tony
Member
A day in saranex is like a week in jeans and a t-shirt, I feel your pain, spent may days like that. I like continously supplied air respirators, scba's are ok, but only give you 15 minutes and are bulky.
d-town tony said:A day in saranex is like a week in jeans and a t-shirt, I feel your pain, spent may days like that. I like continously supplied air respirators, scba's are ok, but only give you 15 minutes and are bulky.
brian crosson said:I love the concept and believe it works... However, I would like to give some criticisms (hope I do not offend).
........... What stops the bacteria from being sucked into the waste?
In addition, some concepts have gone awry. Reactants are sucked into your sand bed or the lower water levels making it more difficult for the air/light to dissipate (i.e. chlorine). Your trace elements will end up in your sand bed not your water column where you want them. The key to a true plenum is low water flow.
I have some torques I would like to run past and see if ideally you can give me some criticisms
What if you use the system in a sump... you can still maintain high current and circulation in the main tank. With lower circulation in the sump allowing reactants to fall naturally. Keeping trace elements and calcium where you want them. Also in the sump you would have marine plants that will use phosphates and nitrogen as fertilizer. The key problem to this is an 18" * 12" plenum is not sufficient for a 100+ gallon tank The key is to skim but under do it so as to keep the majority of good proteins.
The exact system I plan to use starts with 2 outside overflows. Water is pushed through an intake chamber contain shells and broken up live rock. Then skimming with an AquaC Urchin (suggested for 75 gallons or less) (I have over 200 gallons though. Then over a baffle to a refugium. Where the plenum lies beneath a 4 inch sand bed. The plenum is pretty much like yours (wholes are large though) it is connected to a bulkhead which has a small siphon pump. Lastly, I will incorporate one of rpgraff suggestions with a hang on filter with zeolite.
I think my system will provide the best of all worlds. A skimmer is best at getting water surface reactants. The plenum nonsurface reactants. And the zeolite pushing everything else! Next I would still vacuum the main tank substrate and once every other month empty part of the fluidized sand bed as part of a water change.
The key is one month (during water changes) I will remove water from the main tank. The next beneth the plenum.
Chlorine is a gas when you wash your white clothing/ towels and they dry out the gas is transfered into the air. Water natually picks things out of the air. Even RO/di will not get out 100% of toxins. I think the RO filter from dupont advertises 99.99% there will still be trace elements of chlorine. Though probably not readable by any test.
Lets say for theory puroposes that this is small amounts of toxins in your water specifically chlorine. your concept of off on with the pump would pull the gas deep into the tank which naturall escapes the surface of water. It is not a hugh or even signifigant problem. but over time you may poison your sand bed though it may take several decades.
I will try to take pictures in a couple of months when completed!
Also I intend to perform experiments test water quality after skimming, after plenum nitrifing, waste removal, and zeolites in record the results on DFWMAS.
brian crosson said:The point is the way your system works will force things into the sand bed. It may be a decade before it chrashes but it will still crash. You haven't eliminated the problem just extended the duration.
DennisRB said:What use is the system if all the DSB processed water eventually ends up in the sink?
This is how I see CPW in order of the events.
Tank water enters DSB > it gets denitrified > it has a chance to become putrid > in ends up in the sink.
In other words, relatively clean tank water is putrefied then thrown in the sink. You may as well get some tank water. Put in a sealed container for 2 weeks, comment how much in stinks then throw in in the sink. The results will be similar.........
That's been brought up over and over, and no one else has tried to give a good answer, so I'll give it a shot.DennisRB said:What use is the system if all the DSB processed water eventually ends up in the sink?
DennisRB said:"Maybe you can describe your system, how long you've been at it, and what
type of coral and fish you keep to see how you process waste differently.
I'm always open to better ways......Just trying to get my head around the
science of it."
............
The view I have on CPW at the moment is that, all it achieves is the
processing of tank water before it gets thrown away. Why bother processing
the water with a DSB if it will get thrown out anyway? In effect its like
claiming your tank will benefit by doing a water change then treating the
water you just took out of the tank before throwing it away.
Surely you understand my point? I think this point deserves some
explanation on your part if CPW really is all you say it can be. I'm not
even saying CPW is no good as there might be something I have missed in my
reasoning. That is why I eagerly await your reply.
Just trying to get my head around the science of it![]()
DennisRB said:Do you still view the CPW DSB as a biological filter? I don't think you gave a direct answer to the DSB becoming redundant. I'm sure de-nitrification will work great with CPW DSB, too bad whatever gets processed will get dumped.
Surely any water in the lower levels will not mix up with the tank water and consequently just be thrown away? You talk about water slowly going down into the DSB and becoming denitrified. I'm saying it is irrelevant what happens in the CPW DSB as any products will be drained off.
I think CPW eliminates the bad points of DSBs but also eliminates the point in having one in the first place.