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Bottom posted.
- --
You can find my public key at
https://keyserver1.pgp.com
"NetMax" wrote in message
...
I'm going to make a prediction that the next major leap in aquarium
design will be the canopy. I've watched technologies evolve,
filters,
filter media, heaters, lighting technologies, feeding systems and
water
parameter related equipment. Occasionally some of these
technologies
have imbedded themselves into the canopy. For example, 8 years
ago, an
Italian aquarium manufacturer had an auto-feeder built into a
canopy with
T6 fluorescent lighting. They were a little ahead of their time.
Marineland has a line of tanks with their filters built into the
canopy,
and the design has persisted, even with many drawbacks.
The canopy of the future will resemble what we have today, but will
be
much bigger, possibly 8 to 12" thick. It will incorporate things
like:
1. Filter system
- integrated biowheel, and sponge media which would be serviced
through a
hatch in the canopy.
- backwash capability into overflows (see para. 7. below)
2. Storage
- nets, test kits etc
3. Heater
- why use precious aquarium real-estate for an unsightly heater
4. Food storage
- empty/mix all your dried fish foods, pellets, flakes,
freeze-dried etc
into a compartment which is sealed when the hatch is closed.
- there is a screw-type feeder with rubber blades (to keep humidity
away
from the food) operated/programmed from a keypad (integrated into
the
canopy)
- level indicator (proximity switch) provides visual indicator of
low
food levels (ie: by reversing light operation to get your
attention)
- filters would automatically turn off for 10 minutes during
feeding
5. Light System
- staged lighting, programmed from same keypad
- dawn/dusk lights, small halogen making a spot light effect, with
ripples shadowing the substrate, used to transition to/from
nightfall and
daylight main lighting
- main lights (two CF groups, morning 1/2 on, mid-day all on, and
evening
1/2 on again)
- programmed variability (cloudy periods) to reduce algae
(currently done
with timers set to 1 hour off)
- twilight lighting (typically red or actinic) not programmed, set
manually, for those bottle of wine by the fire late evenings.
6. Ventilation & Cooling
- all that lighting will require that the ballasts are in a
separate
vented area (separate from the air under the canopy)
- stainless steel tubing (with cooling fins) replaces conventional
hoses,
allowing atmospheric cooling using a small fan triggered by a
thermocouple.
7. Water/Atmospheric control
- pH regulated through CO2 injected inside canopy (or skip to next
item)
- low pH amber/tannic appearance through black-water concentrate
pellets,
or processed/compressed leaf pellets
- kH regulated through baking soda pellets
- continuous monitoring of conductivity (TDS control)
- plumbed directly into home's DWV and cold water supply line (for
continuous water changes through a drip system)
- thermocouple (replaces thermometer), to activate dynamic cooling
(para.6) and reduce lighting to cool as required. (heater's
thermocouple
would be a separate unit in-line with heating elements).
- backwash cycle which would pulse water in through the gravel,
trapping
mulm in screens located near overflow pipes
8. Power distribution
- plug the canopy in and all peripherals connect to canopy's
integrated
GFI protected power bar.
9. Water Purification option
- clear plastic bell fits on top of canopy (semi-integrated),
housing
various bog/terrestrial plants whose roots would strip out any
remaining
NO3 from non-planted tanks (silk plants would make a come back, but
some
people will always want real plants).
10. Live Food option
- habitat section in canopy for growing small creatures (ie: white
worms
in earth, feeding off decay from mechanical filtration stage, or
mysis
shrimp hatchery etc). Hatchery occupants will randomly 'escape'
into
main tank to be eaten.
Did I miss anything? Today, this equipment & electronics exist
separately, much of it in high volume consumer goods, except for:
a) the canopy itself (fairly straightforward mould with several
options
and expansion panels to include odd sized aquarium dimensions).
b) the canopy horizontal filter (plastic moulds) utilizing twin
(redundancy) generic powerheads
c) the controller and fairly straightforward programming
d) integration of all the components
Alone, I could prototype this in about 6 years (it is that easy),
so a
group of people could probably get one into pre-production testing
in 12
months, and into production, 6 months after that.
The question is, would it sell. Would you buy one? Is it
complete,
anything missing?
--
www.NetMax.tk
I would definitely buy one when starting a new tank and if the price
was relatively reasonable (reasonable can extent to quite high for me
- - maybe $200-$400 usa dollars for a 120 gallon tank or larger). My 3
tanks are established so I wouldn't need to buy the whole shabang in
the case of a breakdown as likely only one component would need to be
replaced. Your idea would look awesome too compared to people having
cables, cords, tubes and pipes spewed out all over the place. You go
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