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#1
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Unless there's something I've missed there's no difference if it's laying
down or not. Perhaps if it is laying on it's side the waterproofing of the bulb is exposed. For instance if it was up and down rain would hit the top and then roll off the sides over any holes - kinda like a roof. If you lay it on its side perhaps rain water could enter. A UV clarifier is just a clear pipe with a UV light next to it. The water enters one side goes under the UV light and then exits. You can build one yourself CHEAP. Sam Bampa wrote in message ... I have been looking at many different brands f clarifiers for my 4000+ gal pond. Some of the more expensive larger units seem to specify horizonal or vertical, but most basic units for 4000 gal ponds don't reference the preferred orientation or the size of the units. I am trying to figure where or how I would back fit a UV into my existing some what cramped plumbing. Does it matter if they stand up or lie down as long as the air gets out of them. Also, I live in Minnesota, so I assume I would have to remove this unit and take it indoors during Winter. |
#2
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get a small UV. use a separate small pump to pump water thru it and put it out of
the way... you dont have to put it inline with your big pump. Ingrid Bampa wrote: I have been looking at many different brands f clarifiers for my 4000+ gal pond. Some of the more expensive larger units seem to specify horizonal or vertical, but most basic units for 4000 gal ponds don't reference the preferred orientation or the size of the units. I am trying to figure where or how I would back fit a UV into my existing some what cramped plumbing. Does it matter if they stand up or lie down as long as the air gets out of them. Also, I live in Minnesota, so I assume I would have to remove this unit and take it indoors during Winter. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
#3
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get a small UV. use a separate small pump to pump water thru it and put it out of
the way... you dont have to put it inline with your big pump. Ingrid Bampa wrote: I have been looking at many different brands f clarifiers for my 4000+ gal pond. Some of the more expensive larger units seem to specify horizonal or vertical, but most basic units for 4000 gal ponds don't reference the preferred orientation or the size of the units. I am trying to figure where or how I would back fit a UV into my existing some what cramped plumbing. Does it matter if they stand up or lie down as long as the air gets out of them. Also, I live in Minnesota, so I assume I would have to remove this unit and take it indoors during Winter. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
#4
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Here's a link to a DIY one:
http://www.koiclay.com/diy/pg2.htm Also a link to a DIY pond vac and stock tank filter system. deanna Bampa wrote: You mentioned that it is simple/CHEAP to build a clarifier. Do you have a design plan or know a web site where I can get a design. I am not afraid to build something, but I don't want to destroy the parts I would need to buy. On Fri, 12 Sep 2003 14:06:38 -0400, "Sam Hopkins" wrote: Unless there's something I've missed there's no difference if it's laying down or not. Perhaps if it is laying on it's side the waterproofing of the bulb is exposed. For instance if it was up and down rain would hit the top and then roll off the sides over any holes - kinda like a roof. If you lay it on its side perhaps rain water could enter. A UV clarifier is just a clear pipe with a UV light next to it. The water enters one side goes under the UV light and then exits. You can build one yourself CHEAP. Sam Bampa wrote in message ... I have been looking at many different brands f clarifiers for my 4000+ gal pond. Some of the more expensive larger units seem to specify horizonal or vertical, but most basic units for 4000 gal ponds don't reference the preferred orientation or the size of the units. I am trying to figure where or how I would back fit a UV into my existing some what cramped plumbing. Does it matter if they stand up or lie down as long as the air gets out of them. Also, I live in Minnesota, so I assume I would have to remove this unit and take it indoors during Winter. |
#5
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Here's a link to a DIY one:
http://www.koiclay.com/diy/pg2.htm Also a link to a DIY pond vac and stock tank filter system. deanna Bampa wrote: You mentioned that it is simple/CHEAP to build a clarifier. Do you have a design plan or know a web site where I can get a design. I am not afraid to build something, but I don't want to destroy the parts I would need to buy. On Fri, 12 Sep 2003 14:06:38 -0400, "Sam Hopkins" wrote: Unless there's something I've missed there's no difference if it's laying down or not. Perhaps if it is laying on it's side the waterproofing of the bulb is exposed. For instance if it was up and down rain would hit the top and then roll off the sides over any holes - kinda like a roof. If you lay it on its side perhaps rain water could enter. A UV clarifier is just a clear pipe with a UV light next to it. The water enters one side goes under the UV light and then exits. You can build one yourself CHEAP. Sam Bampa wrote in message ... I have been looking at many different brands f clarifiers for my 4000+ gal pond. Some of the more expensive larger units seem to specify horizonal or vertical, but most basic units for 4000 gal ponds don't reference the preferred orientation or the size of the units. I am trying to figure where or how I would back fit a UV into my existing some what cramped plumbing. Does it matter if they stand up or lie down as long as the air gets out of them. Also, I live in Minnesota, so I assume I would have to remove this unit and take it indoors during Winter. |
#6
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dhponder writes:
Here's a link to a DIY one: http://www.koiclay.com/diy/pg2.htm Nice. The one I own (brand name long since faded away) uses a simpler method to seal the quartz tube inside the PVC pipe. Its a potting compound that I would guess is epoxy. So each end has the outer PVC pipe, the inner quartz sleeve and the epoxy and no other plumbing parts. They must use something to keep the epoxy from running into the unit maybe a thin PVC disc glued in with PVC cement? It wouldn't have to be waterproof, only hold the viscous epoxy until it cures (5 minutes). Also, I have heard but not confirmed that acrylic tubes work as well as quartz at much lower cost. Though I wonder why UV manufacturers don't take advantage of this if it is true (or do they?). Perhaps acrylic eventually degrades/clouds when exposed to UV? |
#7
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dhponder writes:
Here's a link to a DIY one: http://www.koiclay.com/diy/pg2.htm Nice. The one I own (brand name long since faded away) uses a simpler method to seal the quartz tube inside the PVC pipe. Its a potting compound that I would guess is epoxy. So each end has the outer PVC pipe, the inner quartz sleeve and the epoxy and no other plumbing parts. They must use something to keep the epoxy from running into the unit maybe a thin PVC disc glued in with PVC cement? It wouldn't have to be waterproof, only hold the viscous epoxy until it cures (5 minutes). Also, I have heard but not confirmed that acrylic tubes work as well as quartz at much lower cost. Though I wonder why UV manufacturers don't take advantage of this if it is true (or do they?). Perhaps acrylic eventually degrades/clouds when exposed to UV? |
#8
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yep.
Andrew Burgess wrote: Perhaps acrylic eventually degrades/clouds when exposed to UV? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
#9
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yep.
Andrew Burgess wrote: Perhaps acrylic eventually degrades/clouds when exposed to UV? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
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