"Umm fish?"
Premium Member
Right, barryhc, but I'm refering to a planar mental block.
I don't think our sandbeds have these perfect little layers, but that's the way people think about them. And I think that the mental block and people's reluctance to let go of it is harming a lot of the recent discussion.
No, I don't think your efforts to avoid channeling will be detrimental.
The only real problem I can think of with this is only really a problem for frequent wasting (
). Thought problem: We are relying on diffusion to send all the nasties down to our manifolds. But what are these nasties displacing? By constantly sucking a bunch of O2 rich water down channels to the tank bottom, will we see a diffusion of O2 rich water back up through the sandbed? I think this is kind of Doug's point (or at least one of them
): will this process lead to a completely aerobic bed?
But, I know that you are planning to remove minute quantities of water with each draw and I assume the O2 will be used up relatively rapidly from bacteria around the channels in the sandbed and along the plenum, so I don't think it's a horrible problem as long as you don't over-waste.
I wish we could see what's going on down there. What if you wound up with a top and bottom aerobic layer (here's me coming in with a planar concept, per above discussion
) sandwiching an anaerobic and anoxic zone? What the heck would that do?

Well, I both agree, and disagree. Let me explain. You are quite right in my opinion, about the planar concept. It is there in some places, and not in others. Where it is planar, that just means fairly even, in terms of depth, but much of this is a "contiuous gradient" and "in flux", especially during the "wasting" which I am counting on. And it isn't necessarily even everywhere, but I don't think it has to be. The bacteria are very adaptive.
No, I don't think your efforts to avoid channeling will be detrimental.
The only real problem I can think of with this is only really a problem for frequent wasting (


But, I know that you are planning to remove minute quantities of water with each draw and I assume the O2 will be used up relatively rapidly from bacteria around the channels in the sandbed and along the plenum, so I don't think it's a horrible problem as long as you don't over-waste.
I wish we could see what's going on down there. What if you wound up with a top and bottom aerobic layer (here's me coming in with a planar concept, per above discussion
