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UV Filters and Sizing
First off I live in Central Minnesota in Zone 4A. I have pond that now
holds 5000 gallons minimum and gets full sun during the summer. It has a surface diameter of 20' and is 26" deep. The pump currently flows 1800 GPH+. I used a five gallon bucket but at that rate it is a little hard to time. I would say it gets over 8 hours and close to 12 hours of full sun through out the summer depends on the time of year. It will freeze our during the winter so it will be emptied and the filters will die and loose all bacteria. I will have to start over again next spring spiking the filter system with gravel from there indoor pond. I do not want to create a green house and try heating it or spend next year paying off the electric bill from trying to keep the pond from freezing this winter. Knowing I will have to start over in the spring and I would like clear water and not an algae bloom because the plants will only cover say 10% of the pond what size UV filter would you get? Currently I do not have string algae or anything like that the water is just green from the small suspended algae. I have been reading ratings and they vary depending brand and the person selling it even on the same UV light. I am running the output split to two sources so I can run around 900 gph through a single clarifier or 1800 gph through two. Or get a single large one for both lines. |
UV Filters and Sizing
"Mickey" wrote in message ...
First off I live in Central Minnesota in Zone 4A. I have pond that now holds 5000 gallons minimum and gets full sun during the summer. It has a surface diameter of 20' and is 26" deep. The pump currently flows 1800 GPH+. I used a five gallon bucket but at that rate it is a little hard to time. I would say it gets over 8 hours and close to 12 hours of full sun through out the summer depends on the time of year. It will freeze our during the winter so it will be emptied and the filters will die and loose all bacteria. I will have to start over again next spring spiking the filter system with gravel from there indoor pond. I do not want to create a green house and try heating it or spend next year paying off the electric bill from trying to keep the pond from freezing this winter. Knowing I will have to start over in the spring and I would like clear water and not an algae bloom because the plants will only cover say 10% of the pond what size UV filter would you get? Currently I do not have string algae or anything like that the water is just green from the small suspended algae. I have been reading ratings and they vary depending brand and the person selling it even on the same UV light. I am running the output split to two sources so I can run around 900 gph through a single clarifier or 1800 gph through two. Or get a single large one for both lines. This summer I installed a Laguna 1800 Powerclear on my 600 gallon pond[ by measuring with a salt test kit but I think it more lke 1000 gallons.] Itis an out of pond UV and it works great. I can now see all my 6 large goldfish and the the results of their many spawns. This winter I bought a stock tank heater to keep the ice open. I put it on a timer and it was heating the top layer of the water as the opening got quite large. My wrecked my small pump when it got clogged up and then froze solid. Happy water gardening. |
UV Filters and Sizing
"Mickey" wrote in message ...
First off I live in Central Minnesota in Zone 4A. I have pond that now holds 5000 gallons minimum and gets full sun during the summer. It has a surface diameter of 20' and is 26" deep. The pump currently flows 1800 GPH+. I used a five gallon bucket but at that rate it is a little hard to time. I would say it gets over 8 hours and close to 12 hours of full sun through out the summer depends on the time of year. It will freeze our during the winter so it will be emptied and the filters will die and loose all bacteria. I will have to start over again next spring spiking the filter system with gravel from there indoor pond. I do not want to create a green house and try heating it or spend next year paying off the electric bill from trying to keep the pond from freezing this winter. Knowing I will have to start over in the spring and I would like clear water and not an algae bloom because the plants will only cover say 10% of the pond what size UV filter would you get? Currently I do not have string algae or anything like that the water is just green from the small suspended algae. I have been reading ratings and they vary depending brand and the person selling it even on the same UV light. I am running the output split to two sources so I can run around 900 gph through a single clarifier or 1800 gph through two. Or get a single large one for both lines. This summer I installed a Laguna 1800 Powerclear on my 600 gallon pond[ by measuring with a salt test kit but I think it more lke 1000 gallons.] Itis an out of pond UV and it works great. I can now see all my 6 large goldfish and the the results of their many spawns. This winter I bought a stock tank heater to keep the ice open. I put it on a timer and it was heating the top layer of the water as the opening got quite large. My wrecked my small pump when it got clogged up and then froze solid. Happy water gardening. |
UV Filters and Sizing
On Fri, 29 Aug 2003 20:00:32 -0500, "Mickey" wrote:
First off I live in Central Minnesota in Zone 4A. I have pond that now holds 5000 gallons minimum and gets full sun during the summer. It has a surface diameter of 20' and is 26" deep. The pump currently flows 1800 GPH+. I used a five gallon bucket but at that rate it is a little hard to time. I would say it gets over 8 hours and close to 12 hours of full sun through out the summer depends on the time of year. My first reaction is you're not turning the water volume over fast enough, is this a water garden, koi pond or combo? It will freeze our during the winter so it will be emptied and the filters will die and loose all bacteria. I will have to start over again next spring spiking the filter system with gravel from there indoor pond. I do not want to create a green house and try heating it or spend next year paying off the electric bill from trying to keep the pond from freezing this winter. Don't empty, it could cave in. Use a large airstone (not resting against the liner) during mild weather and a stock tank heater if it gets really cold. ~ jan See my ponds and filter design: http://users.owt.com/jjspond/ ~Keep 'em Wet!~ Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website |
UV Filters and Sizing
On Fri, 29 Aug 2003 20:00:32 -0500, "Mickey" wrote:
First off I live in Central Minnesota in Zone 4A. I have pond that now holds 5000 gallons minimum and gets full sun during the summer. It has a surface diameter of 20' and is 26" deep. The pump currently flows 1800 GPH+. I used a five gallon bucket but at that rate it is a little hard to time. I would say it gets over 8 hours and close to 12 hours of full sun through out the summer depends on the time of year. My first reaction is you're not turning the water volume over fast enough, is this a water garden, koi pond or combo? It will freeze our during the winter so it will be emptied and the filters will die and loose all bacteria. I will have to start over again next spring spiking the filter system with gravel from there indoor pond. I do not want to create a green house and try heating it or spend next year paying off the electric bill from trying to keep the pond from freezing this winter. Don't empty, it could cave in. Use a large airstone (not resting against the liner) during mild weather and a stock tank heater if it gets really cold. ~ jan See my ponds and filter design: http://users.owt.com/jjspond/ ~Keep 'em Wet!~ Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website |
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