Try again: Is anybody running an algae scrubber as primary filter.

but, if you DIY, I see possibilities of doing it at half the price, and being just as effective.

I'm looking at skimmers right now too, octopus are the same price range.
 
If you're looking for a cheaper option, you can do what I did... a modified durso standpipe ATS.

I built a small tank (maybe 10g) out of acrylic, then drilled a hole in the bottom and attached a bulkhead. Then placed a durso inside the tank, but WITHOUT an airhole drilled in the top... it needs to be airtight for suction. I then put a piece of eggcrate in at the level that the 90 degree elbow was at. I plumbed part of my overflow into the ATS. The water fills until it gets to the top of the durso elbow, then empties until the suction breaks. This provides a constant up and down waterflow over the eggcrate. Just make sure when you scrape the eggcrate that you leave some of the algae on it, I once removed it all and it took a while to get it started again. This DIY took a bit of adjusting to get the right amount of input water, and could be a bit noisy, but worked as the primary filtration on my 150g for about 3 years until I moved. Just now got the tank set back up and will hopefully set the ATS back up some time in the future.

Nick
 
Whoa, back from the dead!

I was an ATS user. I had both berlin and ATS systems at one point. It worked well for the type of system I was working towards. I think, though, the direction this hobby has gone, the berlin method is better suited. We've worked ourselves away from high diversity and Au Naturale, to more sterile tanks for better sps coloration. Both are good in my book. Skimmers and bacterial methods like vodka/zeo/probidio have come such a long way, that people are experimenting with nitrogen supplementation!:)

I run my current tank without a DSB, and just use a heavy skimmer. It works. Back to basics. I keep some delicate animals this way. However, next year, I hope to move into a house with a basement, and still hope to grab an old 75g and create an ATS system. Probably something like a lagoon setup. For Now, my inland ATS sits in the garage for now. It worked though, and quite well. But the final product in the display would be something much different than the tanks you see on RC today.
 
heh, this is a really old thread. we kicked all sorts of ideas around over the years.

I love salt buckets! :)
speaking of salt bucket doo-dads, i need to look into mesh modding my gen-x pump. I stole the shade from a torchiere. it is the most awesome skimmer neck I've ever seen :D i want to make a jumbo version of my good old triple-pass berlin, but better.


And this is as good a time as any to note that, this hobby continues to evolve. Coming from the total, schmidt, dark ages to now = WOW!
As you mention, today's skimmers are NOT like yer mama's skimmers

and a big shout out to all you denitrator folks playing with them and building them! this technology would be great to also become just another no-brainer that you can easily set up and maintain and this is how it will happen.

that tunze "reef sewage plant in a box" concept is going to get really slick along the way here too methinks. the pieces parts are all out there around people's tanks already.
Some technologies/methodologies still have a bit to mature, but once the methods are refined to the generally "best" method, the methods will be implemented and merged with the advancing controllers like that current tunze thing, only better and cheaper.

very exciting.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=11289836#post11289836 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Swanwillow
but, if you DIY, I see possibilities of doing it at half the price, and being just as effective.

I'm looking at skimmers right now too, octopus are the same price range.

Oh I agree, you can save a lot of money on a lot of things DIY, but finding the time makes it hard somethimes.
 
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<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=11291070#post11291070 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Mark
Whoa, back from the dead!

I was an ATS user. I had both berlin and ATS systems at one point. It worked well for the type of system I was working towards. I think, though, the direction this hobby has gone, the berlin method is better suited. We've worked ourselves away from high diversity and Au Naturale, to more sterile tanks for better sps coloration. Both are good in my book. Skimmers and bacterial methods like vodka/zeo/probidio have come such a long way, that people are experimenting with nitrogen supplementation!:)

I run my current tank without a DSB, and just use a heavy skimmer. It works. Back to basics. I keep some delicate animals this way. However, next year, I hope to move into a house with a basement, and still hope to grab an old 75g and create an ATS system. Probably something like a lagoon setup. For Now, my inland ATS sits in the garage for now. It worked though, and quite well. But the final product in the display would be something much different than the tanks you see on RC today.

All of the above. I have a DSB, a plenum, a refugium with a big wad of algae growing in it, a 400 gallon rated skimmer, and a turf scrubber. I may even add a denitrator, some mangroves to my fuge, and maybe even some reef mud.
 
:wave: Hi Mark. Seems to be the only thread we meet in anymore.

If anyone wishes, put ATS in the search and it will bring up lots of different ATS threads, including everyones do it your self scrubbers.

The units that Inland once sold, such as the ones Mark & I own, were very nice looking and designed to sit on the top of ones aquarium, with a light hood in front of it and no sump. Of course it could be used in a sump or anywhere else one desired.

As all my posts on the topic say, it worked well for me but not to the point that I thought it could be the sole source of filtration. Perhaps I was striving for the wrong type of tank or did something wrong, I dont know. The turf scrubber was a great addition to the overall filtration though.

Never had to worry about nitrates or phosphates for sure. For myself, it worked better than any of the sump/calerpa type filters I ever tried. I often wondered if most running those, dont have intense enough lighting over their algae. The scrubber screen has a pair of 55w power compacts, only a couple inches over the turf screen.

A friend once lit the algae in his 100g rubbermaid sump with a 400w Iwasaki. That seemed to work well on his 180g tank but shows how the light intensity on the filter has to out compete the intense lights on the tanks. Of at least in my thoughts. :D

Anyways, as I said previous, I cant use my scrubber in my current set up. When we put it on a friends tank, it will be interesting to watch for changes or improvments and I will post them here.
 
Any photos or links to a photos for ATS - small (for 20g tank), inexpensive DIY (do not require work with acrylic), and quiet (no surge)? Or no luck?
Thanks.

Other thing: will hair algae infect the main tank, or there must be UV before entering main tank, as for aiptasia scrubber?
 
I never had any turf algae moving to the display tank. What pics are you looking for. There are some in the thread link I posted and an ATS search will bring up dozens of threads.

My gallery has a pic of my scrubber when it was new but thats to large for a 20g. Mark had a smaller version but would still be to large for the 20.

For a 20g, I would think an Aqua-Clear 500, power filter, converted into a mini refugium would be the best and quietest idea. I have seen many on here, some lit with their own little lights or just from the tanks main lights.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=11274806#post11274806 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by bergzy
i found their webiste:

http://www.algalturfscrubber.com/


but correct me if i am seeing things...

here is a picture from their website:

home_pic_02b.jpg

..







correct me if i am wrong

but i thought an algal turf scrubber
was simply any lited refugium w/ macro as nutrient exporter... 'terms' simply meaning using macro to remove nutrients...

but following the above link provided this description



Algal Turf Scrubbing is a solar/algal technology
that utilizes attached, primarily filamentous algae of many genera and species to capture the energy of sunlight and build algal biomass from CO2. A highly efficient capturer of nutrients from fresh, brackish, and sea water, and a wide variety of waste and industrially-polluted waters, ATS performs point and non-point water cleaning services from aquarium to landscape scales. By combining algal-produced oxygen, at super-saturated levels, with solar or artificial UV, many toxic, organic compounds can be degraded by ATS systems.


ATS produces a low cost harvestable algal biomass
at an order of magnitude greater rate than agricultural and forestry products at the same latitude. Currently used commercially to sequester nutrients while producing cattle fodder and soil amendments, the ATS algal product can also be converted to paper and construction materials and can be used to sequester carbon and heavy metals as well as break-down toxic hydrocarbons. ATS-produced algae can be converted to energy products such as biodiesel, gasohol and methane.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=11293320#post11293320 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by WarrenAmy&Maddy


Algal Turf Scrubbing is a solar/algal technology
that utilizes attached, primarily filamentous algae of many genera and species to capture the energy of sunlight and build algal biomass from CO2. A highly efficient capturer of nutrients from fresh, brackish, and sea water, and a wide variety of waste and industrially-polluted waters, ATS performs point and non-point water cleaning services from aquarium to landscape scales. By combining algal-produced oxygen, at super-saturated levels, with solar or artificial UV, many toxic, organic compounds can be degraded by ATS systems.


ATS produces a low cost harvestable algal biomass
at an order of magnitude greater rate than agricultural and forestry products at the same latitude. Currently used commercially to sequester nutrients while producing cattle fodder and soil amendments, the ATS algal product can also be converted to paper and construction materials and can be used to sequester carbon and heavy metals as well as break-down toxic hydrocarbons. ATS-produced algae can be converted to energy products such as biodiesel, gasohol and methane.



iow all this 'verbage' is simply saying

lited fuge w/ macro added to export nutrients

i first heard this term reading one of calfos books - but took it simply to mean (previous description)


regards
 
The difference (theoretically) between a refugium vs. a turf scrubber is the type of algae grown. According to Adey, turf algae is the more effective at removing nutrients than other algae types.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=11293408#post11293408 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by matt & pam
The difference (theoretically) between a refugium vs. a turf scrubber is the type of algae grown. According to Adey, turf algae is the more effective at removing nutrients than other algae types.

thanks for the clarification

but what is turf algae ? (calerpa?)

regards
 
No, turf algae are types that grow at a air/water interface, kind of like what you see on piers on the ocean. The stuff I have growing in red turf, I had green when I started but now it's almost completely red. It almost looks like hair algae in some ways.

Unlike others, I have had some of the turf algae get on my liverock in the tank. I've finally found sea hare (3rd one) that is really taken a liking to it and I hope to have it cleared off the rock. I've been happy with the ATS in it's ability to maintain very low nitrates and phosphates, but with the growth of turf in my display I've come to realize that the ATS is a part of filtration but not a whole. In fact, I just purchased a Octopus skimmer to add onto my system.

HTH

matt
 
matt and pam,

can you post a pic of your eco-wheel in action? i like the look of it and think it is a great design...

did you have to seed the eco-wheel? or do you just let whatever algae take hold and grow?

thanks! :)
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=11293827#post11293827 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by matt & pam
No, turf algae are types that grow at a air/water interface, kind of like what you see on piers on the ocean. The stuff I have growing in red turf, I had green when I started but now it's almost completely red. It almost looks like hair algae in some ways.

Unlike others, I have had some of the turf algae get on my liverock in the tank. I've finally found sea hare (3rd one) that is really taken a liking to it and I hope to have it cleared off the rock. I've been happy with the ATS in it's ability to maintain very low nitrates and phosphates, but with the growth of turf in my display I've come to realize that the ATS is a part of filtration but not a whole. In fact, I just purchased a Octopus skimmer to add onto my system.

HTH

matt


sounds like perhaps calerpa - becoming a 'pest' in the system - did it migrate into your display or was it added to ?

w/ so many other ways of nutrient export
is this one any better then others and in comparison worth the risk involved (re migration to other parts system)...

use chaeto and xenia
and admittedly the xenia has been reported to take over some people systems - although i have it cut back/groomed in main display to one small area... as grows gets pulled off and thrown in fuge to attach w/ LR rubble then from there ends up at LFS for store credit... i swear by the xenia for exporting nutrients and it grows far faster then chaeto in my system - re chaeto has yet to be groomed vs xenia could be cut back almost weekly- making it appear atleast xenia outcompetes for nutrients... and my tank registers zero nitrates and now zero phospates (finally w/ the addition of phosp reactor)... iow some people say xenia only grows in systems w/ high nutrients (almost as a smirk to those who have it)... it grew the same for mos w/ high phosphates (while still zero nitrates)... and it has CONTINUED to grow as well if not better w/ the phosphates having been removed manually via reactor

xenia scrubber anyone?
;)

best wishes and thanks for the clarification on this.
 
I'd be willing to try a xenia scrubber, if someone wants to help set it up in June when I do my 75 in-wall tank. I haven't been very successful with xenia, but this will also be my first RR tank, with an RO/DI.

For serious. I'll try it if someone will help me with the schematics. I won't do it without a skimmer until its running well though.
 
Part of the problem in my situation deals with the harvesting from my eco-wheel (the brand of ATS I use). Small pieces of the algae end up flowing into the tank. This is great for my yellow tang and rabbitfish, but they obviously didn't keep up. Over the 2+ years my tank ran I had a run of dinoflagellates and then hair algae (this in addition to the turf that now grows on some rock).

I have some xenia in my display, it grows ok. However I find the turf algae grows faster. I can pull two cups of turf algae from the eco-wheel about every 2 weeks.
 
Hey Doug! It's been a while. Good to see you are still around. :)

The thing that made ATS so cool at the time, was how much nitrogenous waste it could remove. Back in the day, our options for keeping nitrates down were skimmers, DSB/Plenums, liverock, and macroalgae. They all worked, but IMO, bioload had to be kept within reason. The ATS units allowed a significant amount of bioload back then. These days, skimmers have really come a long way, and are in some cases almost too efficient at times. Add to that a trend to increase flow(keeping detritus in suspension) paired with a great skimmer, and you are removing nitrogenous waste before it breaks down. That's the trend I've adopted.

I'm actually surprised the freshwater community hasn't jumped on the ATS bandwagon. Most freshwater hobbyists still manage nitrates via water changes. Some planted tank enthusiasts are able to forgo water changes by keeping bioload down. But the ATS units would be great for, say, African cichlid tanks. African cichlid enthusiasts frequently overstock to reduce territoriality.
 
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