Senter - Jack wrote:
Rupertp'foz...Will attempt to answer your questions as follows:
Grow bed drain pipe holes, determine cycle time - yes
OK.. got that.... so what does the sensor in the grow bed do... just determine that the grow bed is full... and shut the pump off... right...
The sensor in the fish tank... recognises the tank is full... and turns on the pump.. right....
Quote:
Model B uses one sensor on final GB filled in sequential filling operation....
...
Multiple GB's filled simultaneously requires a sensor on each GB. (presently maximum of 4 available)
Doesn't make sense... according to your document....
Quote:
MODEL A
Used primarily with a Flood/Drain Aquaponics System providing the cycling of water as needed between one Fish Tank and one Grow Bed. This model can also be used for multiple grow beds, operating with one fish tank.
MODEL B
This model is also designed for an Aquaponics System, but can accommodate up to 4 grow beds, with the grow beds being filled simultaneously, rather than sequentially. The system operates with only one fish tank presently
Assuming that ... "Model B uses one sensor on final GB filled in sequential filling operation...." ... actually refers to Model A...
How can it work with only one sensor in the end grow bed... unless by "sequential filling operation".... you mean... cascading the flow from one grow bed to fill the next....
Until the sensor in the last grow bed detects "full"... and shuts off the pump????
Model B.... with multiple grow beds...filled simultaneously... requires a sensor in each bed....
But if the beds are filling simultaneously..... and/or one bed senses "full"... surely it will shut off the pump...
Even if the other beds are not full.... they wont be filled... until the water drains back to the tank.. triggering the tank full sensor... to turn on the pump..... by which time the beds may already be empty again....
What prevents.. or perhaps to put it better... what balances the flow into each bed... when filling simultaneously... so that they're all full... and not subject to a single sensor "off"....
And if in fact that can be achieved... then what's the need for a sensor in each bed???
I'm sorry... but I still don't understand it...

Quote:
Probes are copper and stainless steel, not aware of any copper leakage problems to date
Have run copper for 3 months, no problems with corrosion etc., can be easily cleaned as maintenance.
No problems to date with bio-fillter fouling that I know of.....
What's your pH... and how many/what fish do you have in the system???
Copper is known to leach in acidic conditions... and known to be lethal to fish and crustaceans... over time...
Bio-film build up.. and fouling of the sensors... may be a matter of time based on number of fish/feed rates...
Quote:
Price depends on Model and any custom modification required
OK... lets be more specific.... without any "user" modification requirement... what is the price for a standard...
Model A - 1 bed?
Model B - 4 bed?
Quote:
Tank transfer volume, estimated at 50 gal/hour
If your grow bed is 30 gallon... then allowing for your media displacement... the actual water volume is probably more like 20 gallon... two cycles per hour => 40 gall/hour....
But is this actually the limitation of the pump... as much as the sensor time period??
If we assume multiple beds.... (and a correspondingly larger tank)... then the pump sizing becomes critical to hourly water volume turnover...
As if it's not big enough... then the multiple beds.. regardless of being filled sequentially, or simultaneously... may result in a long fill period, long drain period... and perhaps only one cycle per hour...
The same would be the case with larger volume grow beds... singular... or multiple...
Another question arises... in a multiple bed/sensor configuration... what is the maximum sensor cable length?