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peter shaw
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Posted: Jan 7th, '09, 23:55 |
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Joined: Sep 12th, '08, 03:14 Posts: 28 Gender:
Location: Santa Cruz
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Maybe a simple question but, nothing is simple..
my growbed is 4' x 8' by 10" deep, lined with pond liner and filled with hydroton. I have two bh fittings at the bottom at one end of the bed, one connected to a loop siphon and the other is an overflow. I am using plastic drain pipe to keep the hydroton from contacting the filters on the bh fittings.
I am trying to determine how big of a sump I have to have to supply water to the fish tank which will overflow into the grow bed, which will fill and then drain.
So, the question is, at about 22 cm in depth, how deep should the water fill to before I want the siphon to kick on? Or.. half way, most of the way?
cheers
peter
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TCLynx
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Posted: Jan 8th, '09, 00:58 |
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| Seriously, this cant be healthy. |
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Joined: Dec 6th, '07, 01:13 Posts: 10709 Images: 0 Location: central FL Gender:
Are you human?: YES at least mostly
Location: USA, Florida, Yalaha
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Most people flood to about 1" below the top of the gravel or other media. It is good to keep the top of the gravel dry or algae grows, stem rot can happen, and more water is lost to evaporation.
If you can figure out the total volume of your grow bed/s then make sure your sump will hold at least half or a little more than half that amount to allow for some depth for the pump and evaporation before running dry. As a rule of thumb (though it can vary depending on type of gravel and mass of plant roots) people usually figure that a 100 l tub filled with media can hold 40 l of water when flooded or 40%. I usually round that up to 50% just to give myself extra leeway and make the figuring even easier. More protection from sump overflow or running the pump dry. If you have enough extra depth you can easily install a float top up valve in said sump (above the pump running dry level but below the normal low water mark when all beds are flooded) so that as water evaporates from the system, the top up can keep you within the proper water level range.
I actually rather like the idea of having a sump tank as big as the fish tank for a continually running system with twice as much grow beds as fish tank or 2:1 ratio as they say.
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peter shaw
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Posted: Jan 8th, '09, 02:05 |
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Joined: Sep 12th, '08, 03:14 Posts: 28 Gender:
Location: Santa Cruz
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Excellent, thanks
still having a bit of difficulty with the 2:1 ratio, so help me out here.
my fish tank is a 100 gal tank, and i suppose it will be filled to about 90 gal.
my grow bed is 4' x 8' x 9" with about 50% media filled so about 90 gal, but it is really about 180 gal of total volume, solids and pores (air and or water).
But to fill the the growbed with water i will need somewhere near 75 gal, thus that is my sump volume correct?
So I add another 75 gal of sump I would have about 180 gal of space in my gb and 165 gal in my water system.
not really close to a 2:1 ratio,
If ones adds more gb then one needs a larger sump to fill the growbeds or.... 2 pumps and a timer.
Should I just decrease the water volume in the fish tank, to say 50 gal?
cheers
peter
peter
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TCLynx
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Posted: Jan 8th, '09, 04:48 |
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| Seriously, this cant be healthy. |
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Joined: Dec 6th, '07, 01:13 Posts: 10709 Images: 0 Location: central FL Gender:
Are you human?: YES at least mostly
Location: USA, Florida, Yalaha
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woah
Hope this will make it a little simpler.
The ratio is about the total grow bed volume to the total fish tank volume. The ratio is about the amount of growbed (filtration) compared to fish living space.
Don't worry about the total amount of water in the system when figuring the ratio and don't worry about the % of water it takes to fill the growbed etc when figuring the Ratio of growbed to fish tank.
You only worry about the % of water to fill the grow beds when figuring out how much sump you need or how much the water will fluctuate in the fish tank of a simple system.
You only worry about the total amount of water contained in a system if you need to dose with salt or something like that.
If the total volume of your grow bed is 180 gallons and the total water in your fish tank is 90 gallons, then you have a 2:1 ratio.
If your total grow bed volume is 180 gallons I would tell you to make sure you have a 90-100 gallon sump tank just to be safe (that is my personal opinion about the needed capacity for the sump tank just to make life easier, allow depth for the pump to work, and perhaps let you install a float top up between the pump dry level and the normal low water mark.)
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RupertofOZ
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Posted: Jan 9th, '09, 07:12 |
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I suggest an immediate term in "rehab" DD ... 
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