dkeller_nc
New member
Some good options given above regarding DT water movement. There is a difference between the flow's given off by a close loop system and that of MP powerheads. With a well designed close loop system you can have several areas of Turbulent flow with a MP system using at least 2 you can have 1 area. That area would be only where their flow paths crossed/meet around the middle part of the DT.
MP's are a nice product and have their place just a close loop system does, but they are different in what they can do.
Um... That's not actually correct, at least from an fluid mechanics standpoint. The output from a nozzle from a CL system and the output of a propeller or traditional powerhead is fundamentally laminar (i.e., not turbulent). It would take incredible (and pretty much unachievable) flow rates through the loop in a CL system to convert the flow inside the pipe from laminar to turbulent. On a propeller pump or traditional powerhead, of course, it's laminar by its very nature.
So, that leaves one with creating a zone of turbulence by interaction of the flow field with the tank walls, rocks, or other flow fields. In this respect, flow from a nozzle of a CL system is completely equivalent to the flow from a powerhead/propeller pump. What one can do, of course, is drill more holes and put more output nozzles on a closed loop operated by a single pump, while in the case of powerheads/propeller pumps one must add an additional unit.
However, in all cases (no matter how many output nozzles are installed), a CL system is drastically less efficient than a propeller pump - by a factor of at least 5, and depending on how much knowledge of fluid mechanics the aquarist has when the loop is designed and installed, it may be less efficient by a factor of 10 or 15.
Closed Loop systems are also far less flexible than propeller pumps with regard to changing the aquascaping inside the tank and changing the flow pattern to accommodate the new lay-out. With a propeller pump, one simply moves it to a different part of the glass, or a different part of the rockwork.
Finally, the flow from a propeller pump can be changed far faster than a closed loop. Rapidly ramping up/down a centrifugal pump in a closed loop arrangement in a second or two as a propeller pump is capable of will dramatically shorten the life of the pump. Even if one could operate a centrifugal pump in a rapid on/off fashion, the flow coming out of the nozzles won't change nearly as rapidly, since the outlet piping constitutes a pressurized system where the longer the pipe length/larger the diameter of the pipe, the slower the flow response.
All this said, there are a few advantages to a closed-loop arrangement:
The first, as mentioned by the OP, is aesthetic. I do agree that powerheads/propeller pumps visibility in the aquascape should be minimized as much as possible. A closed loop drilled through the bottom of the tank makes concealment easy.
The second is the amount of equipment to maintain/repair. A closed loop has one pump, and possibly one drum-type flow switch. And practically speaking, one could have as much as 3 to 4 outlet nozzles on such a loop (any more than that and one starts getting into low back-pressure issues with a centrifugal pump, which will destroy the pump). To get the equivalent, one would need to purchase/maintain 3 or 4 powerheads, though the total flow will be a good deal higher with this option.
The third is systems that need a very large amount of water movement that only an industrial-sized centrifugal pump can provide. This is one reason that public aquariums almost exclusively use closed-loop systems for circulation, although Venotec is trying to change that with huge propeller/penductor pumps.
However,