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Flooming Anyone?



 
 
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  #1  
Old June 27th 04, 10:42 PM
~ jan JJsPond.us
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Default Flooming Anyone?

Regarding aeration of water:
http://www.goldfishvet.com/faqs/floo...raeration.html
~ jan


(Do you know where your water quality is?)
  #2  
Old June 27th 04, 11:29 PM
Anne Lurie
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Default Flooming Anyone?

I must be ahead of my time -- my wee little water garden experiences
"flooming" a lot! After cleaning the filters of my Little Giant pump, about
half the time I manage to dislodge the fountain part from the pump when I
lower it back into the water garden.

Who knew?

Anne Lurie
Raleigh, NC



"~ jan JJsPond.us" wrote in message
s.com...
Regarding aeration of water:
http://www.goldfishvet.com/faqs/floo...raeration.html
~ jan


(Do you know where your water quality is?)



  #3  
Old June 28th 04, 05:03 AM
Karen Mullen
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Default Flooming Anyone?

this is how I keep the water clear of ice during the winter months. the pump
is on the bottom with a pipe just below the water flooming the surface.

Karen
Zone 5
Ashland, OH
http://hometown.aol.com/kmam1/MyPond/MyPond.html
My Art Studio at
http://members.aol.com/kmmstudios/K....M.Studios.html
for email remove the extra extention





  #4  
Old June 28th 04, 06:32 AM
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Default Flooming Anyone?

it is complete and utter nonsense. the fine air bubbles put into the water by good
airstones lifts the entire water column from below, it blows toxic gases out while it
vastly increases oxygenation of the water. looks like somebody wasnt paying
attention in physics classes.
and, I might add, take a look at how many watts that water pump is sucking up and
produces a vastly inferior aeration.
Now if that pump is for the filter and that runs over rocks that break the stream up
and puts it out over a nice vast surface, that is economical aeration.
Yes, in winter I use my pump in one of my bucket filters to gently roll the surface
as well... but I have my air pump going all winter for aeration. And there are a lot
of people have had to learn the hard way that in cold climates proper aeration is
MORE important that pumps. The die offs dont occur in winter, it occurs in spring
when all the bacteria on the bottom start getting active and using up the oxygen
crunching up the settled organics at the same time the fish metabolism starts
increasing oxygen demand.
Giving it a new name doesnt make it any truer.
Ingrid

~ jan JJsPond.us wrote:

Regarding aeration of water:
http://www.goldfishvet.com/faqs/floo...raeration.html
~ jan


(Do you know where your water quality is?)




~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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.
  #5  
Old June 28th 04, 08:29 AM
how
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Default Flooming Anyone?

wrote in message
...
it is complete and utter nonsense. the fine air bubbles put into the

water by good
airstones lifts the entire water column from below, it blows toxic gases

out while it
vastly increases oxygenation of the water. looks like somebody wasn't

paying
attention in physics classes.
and, I might add, take a look at how many watts that water pump is sucking

up and
produces a vastly inferior aeration.

snipped the stuff on winter as I'm not a believer


Hi,
Have to agree with the doc here, great new name (flooming) that even works
to a degree by increasing the surface area of the pond. If you do the math
the amount of this increase is minimal hence negligible in aeration. Bubbles
and the smaller the better are the way to go. I do use aerators on Lil
Giant 6CIMs (real watt hogs) as emergency aerators but only temporarily and
I'm not buying the juice.
L8R -_- how
no NEWS is good




  #6  
Old June 28th 04, 09:29 AM
Sean Dinh
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Default Flooming Anyone?

I have to disagree here. Fine air bubbles can't really blows any gases out of the water.
Gas exchange need to happen at water/air interface. What fine air bubbles really doing
for gas exchange is to move water from the bottom to the surface. In this pump mode, fine
air bubbles has little efficiency without the aid of ducting.

Any pump that move water from bottom to the water/air interface could be considered
'vastly increasing' oxygenation, in a sense that oxygenation rate is higher for
relatively oxygen poor water from the bottom as compared to water from the top. I won't
go as far as claiming airstone 'vastly increases' oxygenation. I reserve that for cooling
tower/TT.

The main reason that airstones are so popular in aerating large ponds, lakes, and sewage
treatment plants is that it's very low maintenance water pump. The only thing to maintain
is to clean the air filter. It's considered the most reliable way to aerate water. There
is nothing more besides that feature.

As for flooming, it does work. If it's good enough for sewage treatment plants, it's good
enough for our ponds.



wrote:

the fine air bubbles put into the water by good
airstones lifts the entire water column from below, it blows toxic gases out while it
vastly increases oxygenation of the water.


  #7  
Old June 28th 04, 01:21 PM
Jim and Phyllis Hurley
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Default Flooming Anyone?

Flooming is a nice term.

What many of us are already doing surely competes well with 'flooming':
Think about the value of pulling water from the bottom of the pond, running
it through a veggie filter and down a waterfall or stream...at a rate of
25-50% per hour. Massive exposure to air. Probably beats flooming hands
down!

Jim

--
____________________________________________
See our pond at: home.bellsouth.net\p\pwp-jameshurley
Ask me about Jog-A-Thon fundraiser (clears $120+ per child) at: jogathon.net

"~ jan JJsPond.us" wrote in message
s.com...
Regarding aeration of water:
http://www.goldfishvet.com/faqs/floo...raeration.html
~ jan


(Do you know where your water quality is?)



  #8  
Old June 28th 04, 01:33 PM
Benign Vanilla
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Default Flooming Anyone?


"Karen Mullen" wrote in message
...
this is how I keep the water clear of ice during the winter months. the

pump
is on the bottom with a pipe just below the water flooming the surface.

snip

I do the same. I use a small 200gph or so pump to "boil" the surface in the
shallows of the pond. Last year, it kept a nice hole in the ice.

BV.


  #9  
Old June 28th 04, 08:18 PM
how
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Flooming Anyone?

"Sean Dinh" wrote in message
...
I have to disagree here. Fine air bubbles can't really blows any gases out

of the water.
Gas exchange need to happen at water/air interface. What fine air bubbles

really doing
for gas exchange is to move water from the bottom to the surface. In this

pump mode, fine
air bubbles has little efficiency without the aid of ducting.

snips
As for flooming, it does work. If it's good enough for sewage treatment

plants, it's good
enough for our ponds.


Hi,
Fine bubbles or any bubbles are, in fact, a water/air interface.
Supersaturated gasses can escape using bubbles and oxygen is added to the
water. I went back to my notes and although the pump method (flooming) does
oxygenate, it does so by spreading the bottom water over 'hundreds of square
feet of surface' as it 'falls downhill'. Not everyone has hundreds of square
feet of surface or wants to run another pump. The bubble method works much
better but better yet when powered by a blower. This gives the best of both,
a large upwelling at the surface which consists of thousands of little
bubbles.
L8R -_- how
no NEWS is good


  #10  
Old June 29th 04, 06:44 PM
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Flooming Anyone?

and not from the VERY bottom.. LOL, but yes it most certainly is the most efficient
way of aerating, as long as the waterfall roils the water or the stream is shallow.
INgrid

"Jim and Phyllis Hurley" wrote:
What many of us are already doing surely competes well with 'flooming':
Think about the value of pulling water from the bottom of the pond, running
it through a veggie filter and down a waterfall or stream...at a rate of
25-50% per hour. Massive exposure to air. Probably beats flooming hands
down!Jim




~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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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