haid
New member
Another off the wall option to just throw out there I was thinking about is creating a false anoxic layer. We should easily be able to blow out the aerobic layer on top(reverse undergravel). So that gets us to Nitrate and left over phosphate, ect. What I was thinking is create the plenum base with not sand but a partition(glass, acyrlic). With the Aerobic section/liverock puting nitrate back to the system water along with unbroken down detritus. Ok now the plenum is kept oxygen difecient with the use of the partition and a slow draw from the plenum. Ok so you barry coils of tubing in the top aerobic layer and hook them to small bulkheads through the partition. The slow draw from the plenum will cause new flow to the plenum. The coiled tubing becomes the anoxic layer. Thus Breaking down the nitrate. Phosphate remains but is removed by the continuous wasting from the powerhead mixed plenum. Maybe too complicated to work right. Not sure but I think this could leave a nice "sand bed" for looks on top that will not be "loaded" and could be used by critters. Should eliminate pluging and problems with diffusion rate to the plenum. And a continuous wasting of the "sink". Also the use of wet skimming/good flow to remove what is pushed up and out of the top aerobic layers and to reduce settling on rocks. And also as mention before slow but constant water changes that should not effect oxygen levels in any of the zones and would keep them from shifting to different depths over time. I have a 55 gallon that I am thinking of trying to run simular.