cabinetman123
Member
I think you guys are over thinking this lol. Keep it simple.
I'm saying to get a protein skimmer effect going on as well. Lets say you have a taller column of half sand half water. Ok, the idea is basically a protein skimmer half filled with sand, but run on gravity.
Sorry, I misunderstood your point. Thanks for setting me right.
CM, I agree that the KISS method works. But I'd really like a back flush that worked rather than spending 5 or 10 minutes pushing a wand around in the filter sand. But that's just me.
You don't know until you try it lol. There's something very rewarding about watching all that crap go to drain. I never get sick of it lol!
Im sorry but doing that every 3-5 days would get old IMHO. Unless it could be automated, I agree with some others, I dont think this method is substantially less work than a sock, and certainly a much larger PITA to setup, not to mention space issues for most folks. Dont get me wrong though, I think its cool, but unless I was able to automated the backflush, or at least make the process as simple as turning a couple valves and let it do its thing....I wouldnt go through the trouble personally.
Im sorry but doing that every 3-5 days would get old IMHO. Unless it could be automated, I agree with some others, I dont think this method is substantially less work than a sock, and certainly a much larger PITA to setup, not to mention space issues for most folks. Dont get me wrong though, I think its cool, but unless I was able to automated the backflush, or at least make the process as simple as turning a couple valves and let it do its thing....I wouldnt go through the trouble personally.
I am planning on having a tide pool zone that acts as a sand filter after trapping water durring high tide. The flush comes when tide comes back in (before it goes over the top of the barrier the water pressure pushes it up. In the tide pool I will have sea grasses, oysters, clams, snails, crabs, isopods, mangroves, etc... Hopefully the roots take up a lot of nutrients and the sand is deep enough to get a good cycle going on. Gonna have some sweet bonzai mangroves! Under the sand bed I want to put a sand net and some egg crate and create a bit of a cryptic zone where some sponges can thrive before the water escapes through some LR into a macroalgae zone before going back to the reef.
I am planning on having a tide pool zone that acts as a sand filter after trapping water durring high tide. The flush comes when tide comes back in (before it goes over the top of the barrier the water pressure pushes it up. In the tide pool I will have sea grasses, oysters, clams, snails, crabs, isopods, mangroves, etc... Hopefully the roots take up a lot of nutrients and the sand is deep enough to get a good cycle going on. Gonna have some sweet bonzai mangroves! Under the sand bed I want to put a sand net and some egg crate and create a bit of a cryptic zone where some sponges can thrive before the water escapes through some LR into a macroalgae zone before going back to the reef.
Truly impressed with this. I don't think I would have thought of it. The process seems a little complicated but I guess once its plumbed its no problem. Only real downside I see is it takes up some room.
What if you use 10000 gallon pool 12" sand filter which goes for around 125 dollars with 1200 gph pump, I am planning on using one of the output from my return pump to run it through the sand filter so that i don't have to use the pump that comes with sand filter or use the pump that comes with sand filter and since it comes with timer on the pump , i can have it run every 2 hrs or 3 hrs..and back wash the filter on weekly water change... what you guys think?
What if you use 10000 gallon pool 12" sand filter which goes for around 125 dollars with 1200 gph pump, I am planning on using one of the output from my return pump to run it through the sand filter so that i don't have to use the pump that comes with sand filter or use the pump that comes with sand filter and since it comes with timer on the pump , i can have it run every 2 hrs or 3 hrs..and back wash the filter on weekly water change... what you guys think?
Don't think they'd work for me man. I'm way over stocked. I need something way more aggressive.
This is quite the idea. I'm just starting my first saltwater tank, but this might be just the ticket for my freshwater tanks.
CM, how has the filter been running the last few months?
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