
Haha.
You are funny guy, Charlie -
I kill you last! Some of us actually have work to do outside

, you know, where there are no computers? Not complaining coz I love it, but it was really good to come back inside as the rain started falling and find so many excellent and educated responses to my question.
Thanks to all of you for going to the trouble of drawing on your experience or even pulling out the reference books to help me get my head around this one. On the balance of your responses I would say that this claim has to go in the myth basket.
RupertofOZ wrote:
Do tell... who was this "expert"????
I don't want to name names, R'OZ, but I have his business card on my desk. Apparently he has worked for NASA on a big aeroponics project, which I promptly looked up since I hadn't previously even heard of aeroponics. It is an exciting area of development - have a look:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aeroponics#NASA_inflatable_aeroponicsEven if my expert acquaintance is off the mark re the oxygen depletion of pumped water, he certainly knew his stuff, generally. At the time I bumped into him out the back of a warehouse, he was hunched over some conical drums and pipework with a team of gnomes creating a sophisticated looking vortex filter/biofilter setup. That was when I first saw an
eductor working its magic and, of course, I have now incorporated one into my big concrete tank system.
My expert uses eductors for mass water movement and to compensate for the (real or imagined) loss of oxygen in the systems he designs.
(It has taken quite a while to type this due to having a 6 hour old rejected chick in my hand - long story.)