
Solar pond filter?
#1
Guest_Bob_*
Posted 21 March 2011 - 09:32 AM
Does anyone have any experience with a small solar pond filter that they'd recommend?
Thanks!
#2
Guest_Newt_*
Posted 23 March 2011 - 04:03 PM
I know that's not really what you were asking, but I think plant filtration is too often overlooked.
#3
Guest_Irate Mormon_*
Posted 26 March 2011 - 11:01 PM
*High noon at midsummer, in southern climes.
#4
Guest_EricaWieser_*
Posted 27 March 2011 - 12:26 PM
The solar powered pond pump plus the DIY garbage can filter would equal a solar powered pond filter. But you don't have a pond, you have a 50 gallon tank. Just use a normal aquarium filter and a waterproof extension cord. Or use a normal aquarium filter, a solar panel, and an adapter. But solar panels are a tad expensive, so ... personally, I'd use the extension cord.
Edit:
And Newt has a point; if you had live plants, you wouldn't have to make any massive water changes. I have a tank right now set up with lots of live, growing plants, where the plants eat all forms of nitrogen as soon as they are created. They suck up ammonia and nitrate greedily. Do some research on what is called a "Walstad" tank, after Diana Walstad.
Edited by EricaWieser, 27 March 2011 - 12:31 PM.
#5
Guest_Irate Mormon_*
Posted 28 March 2011 - 09:36 PM
So Bob, how about that filter? I offer a 10% discount for NANFA members!
#6
Guest_Bob_*
Posted 11 April 2011 - 01:55 PM
I've back burnered the solar filter for now. My hope was that someone who had used one would have a recommendation. As you know, when a NANFA member recommends something, you can take it to the bank. Barring that, I think I'll wait awhile, until the technology improves.
A 50 gallon tank is not a pond. If you had a pond, then I would suggest getting a solar powered pump (example: http://www.google.co...iw=1368&bih=608 ) and rigging it up to your own garbage can filter, design for example here: http://www.instructa...-A-GARBAGE-CAN/
The solar powered pond pump plus the DIY garbage can filter would equal a solar powered pond filter. But you don't have a pond, you have a 50 gallon tank. Just use a normal aquarium filter and a waterproof extension cord. Or use a normal aquarium filter, a solar panel, and an adapter. But solar panels are a tad expensive, so ... personally, I'd use the extension cord.
Edit:
And Newt has a point; if you had live plants, you wouldn't have to make any massive water changes. I have a tank right now set up with lots of live, growing plants, where the plants eat all forms of nitrogen as soon as they are created. They suck up ammonia and nitrate greedily. Do some research on what is called a "Walstad" tank, after Diana Walstad.
#7
Guest_jetajockey_*
Posted 11 April 2011 - 04:14 PM
#8
Guest_Bob_*
Posted 13 April 2011 - 02:48 PM
One thing that works well for me with barebottom indoor tanks is to fit a powerhead with a filter and drop it in the tank overnight. The next day, all the junk is in the filter fiber, which I change and add to another tank. It's easier and less time consuming for me than vacuuming with the Python.
I have a half dozen tub 'ponds' set up on my back deck, they are all 18-20g sizes and I have air driven sponge filters in them. I also have the same thing set up in a small preformed pond in the front. Last year I set some tanks up outside over the summer and they did pretty well with no filtration/aeration at all except for plants, however I think running some sort of filtration/aeration is ideal.
#9
Guest_jetajockey_*
Posted 13 April 2011 - 03:43 PM
Yeah, I've always set up the stock tank without filtration, and my solution to accumulating detritus is to empty it and refill it once or twice during the season. I was hoping to have some kind of intermittent filtration without having to run a line from the house or the outdoor outlet in the back of the house.
One thing that works well for me with barebottom indoor tanks is to fit a powerhead with a filter and drop it in the tank overnight. The next day, all the junk is in the filter fiber, which I change and add to another tank. It's easier and less time consuming for me than vacuuming with the Python.
I think one way around it would be to put mineralized soil/clay substrate so that the detritus soaks in and eventually gets broken down on it's own. some stem plants to soak up the nutrients and all is well in hypothesisville.
#10
Guest_Bob_*
Posted 25 April 2011 - 09:26 AM
I think one way around it would be to put mineralized soil/clay substrate so that the detritus soaks in and eventually gets broken down on it's own. some stem plants to soak up the nutrients and all is well in hypothesisville.
#11
Guest_EricaWieser_*
Posted 25 April 2011 - 10:26 AM
Does substrate do anything to convert ammonia on its own? I always assumed it was the plants that did the nitrogen fixing. Drat, I wish I had my copy of Diana Walstad's Ecology of the Planted Aquarium handy, because I bet she published some data in there.I think one way around it would be to put mineralized soil/clay substrate so that the detritus soaks in and eventually gets broken down on it's own. some stem plants to soak up the nutrients and all is well in hypothesisville.
Edited by EricaWieser, 25 April 2011 - 10:26 AM.
#12
Guest_nativeplanter_*
Posted 25 April 2011 - 10:34 AM
Does substrate do anything to convert ammonia on its own? I always assumed it was the plants that did the nitrogen fixing. Drat, I wish I had my copy of Diana Walstad's Ecology of the Planted Aquarium handy, because I bet she published some data in there.
Yes, the substrate provides surface area for nitrifying bacteria and will convert the ammonia to nitrite then to nitrate.
BTW, nitrogen fixation is a different thing. That is done by bacteria (often in symbiosis with the roots of certain plant species, but also as free-living cyanobacteria). They take nitrogen gas from the air and convert it to ammonia.
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