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#1
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hau kolas..curious to know what folks here use for dispersal of co2..and which is "best"..the glass/ceramic diffusers or the
powered/passive reactor chambers..or running the co2 gas outlet into the intake of a canister filter? TIA lila pilamaya -- **FREE LEONARD PELTIER NOW** |
#2
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Far Thunder wrote:
hau kolas..curious to know what folks here use for dispersal of co2..and which is "best"..the glass/ceramic diffusers or the powered/passive reactor chambers..or running the co2 gas outlet into the intake of a canister filter? TIA lila pilamaya The Eheim glass/ceramic diffuser is problematic for may people due to clogging and the unusually high pressure required to unseat the checkvalve. The simple Hagen bubble ladder is easy to use and inexpensive. Also, it serves the need for a bubble counter. If you can hide one in your tank it is worth considering. I have experience with one in a 20G and a 125G tank. The 125G is way beyond the recommended size for this component, but it is possible to get CO2 up to 20ppm or so with a high flow rate like 5+ bubbles per second. A diffuser would be the deluxe solution, especially if you already have external plumbing. It has the advantages of being completely hidden and capable of high infusion rates. -- |
#3
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what is a bubble counter and what is its purpose?
"George Pontis" wrote: Far Thunder wrote: hau kolas..curious to know what folks here use for dispersal of co2..and which is "best"..the glass/ceramic diffusers or the powered/passive reactor chambers..or running the co2 gas outlet into the intake of a canister filter? TIA lila pilamaya The Eheim glass/ceramic diffuser is problematic for may people due to clogging and the unusually high pressure required to unseat the checkvalve. The simple Hagen bubble ladder is easy to use and inexpensive. Also, it serves the need for a bubble counter. If you can hide one in your tank it is worth considering. I have experience with one in a 20G and a 125G tank. The 125G is way beyond the recommended size for this component, but it is possible to get CO2 up to 20ppm or so with a high flow rate like 5+ bubbles per second. A diffuser would be the deluxe solution, especially if you already have external plumbing. It has the advantages of being completely hidden and capable of high infusion rates. |
#4
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i use the venturri head that came with my Red Sea contraption. I plan
on getting pressurized co2 and still using the venturri. its like a bubble blender if you will. "Far Thunder" wrote: hau kolas..curious to know what folks here use for dispersal of co2..and which is "best"..the glass/ceramic diffusers or the powered/passive reactor chambers..or running the co2 gas outlet into the intake of a canister filter? TIA lila pilamaya |
#5
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Bottom posted.
fusQuanto wrote: what is a bubble counter and what is its purpose? "George Pontis" wrote: Far Thunder wrote: hau kolas..curious to know what folks here use for dispersal of co2..and which is "best"..the glass/ceramic diffusers or the powered/passive reactor chambers..or running the co2 gas outlet into the intake of a canister filter? TIA lila pilamaya The Eheim glass/ceramic diffuser is problematic for may people due to clogging and the unusually high pressure required to unseat the checkvalve. The simple Hagen bubble ladder is easy to use and inexpensive. Also, it serves the need for a bubble counter. If you can hide one in your tank it is worth considering. I have experience with one in a 20G and a 125G tank. The 125G is way beyond the recommended size for this component, but it is possible to get CO2 up to 20ppm or so with a high flow rate like 5+ bubbles per second. A diffuser would be the deluxe solution, especially if you already have external plumbing. It has the advantages of being completely hidden and capable of high infusion rates. I think a bubble counter is a device that lets you calculate how much co2 is really getting into the water and it allows the bubbles more time to dissolve when compared to straight emitting the bubble into the bottom of the tank because with the bubble counter the co2 bubble is in contact with the water for a much longer amount of time. |
#6
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In article ,
fusQuanto wrote: what is a bubble counter and what is its purpose? It has nothing to do with bubbles or counting anything, it's actually an alien propulsion unit from 7 centuries in the future here by mistake. The aliens trying to recover them insert covert messages into aquarium chat thingies as a method of communicating in secret. Or it's a thing that counts bubbles. Your pick. -- Need Mercedes parts ? - http://parts.mbz.org Richard Sexton | Mercedes stuff: http://mbz.org 1970 280SE, 72 280SE | Home page: http://rs79.vrx.net 633CSi 250SE/C 300SD | http://aquaria.net http://killi.net |
#7
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"Richard Sexton" wrote in message
... In article , fusQuanto wrote: what is a bubble counter and what is its purpose? It has nothing to do with bubbles or counting anything, it's actually an alien propulsion unit from 7 centuries in the future here by mistake. The aliens trying to recover them insert covert messages into aquarium chat thingies as a method of communicating in secret. Actually Richard you are wrong, its from 7 centuries in the past. And contratry to popular belief it was not a mistake, it was the 'Intelligent Designer' aka Flying Spaghetti Monster that purposely sent it here. Were still trying to figure out exactly what it does. Religious folks call it a miracle but more sane people are calling it what it really is, a spade! So there. -- Kind Regards Cameron |
#8
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fusQuanto wrote:
what is a bubble counter and what is its purpose? "George Pontis" wrote: Far Thunder wrote: ... A diffuser would be the deluxe solution, especially if you already have external plumbing. It has the advantages of being completely hidden and capable of high infusion rates. A bubble counter is a clear vessel, often a plastic cylinder, filled with a liquid through which your CO2 bubbles up before entering the tubing that will carry it to the diffuser. Most CO2 regulator assemblies for an aquarium have one after the needle valve. It is useful to get an quick estimate of your CO2 flow rate since an aquarium takes a long time to reach equilibrium. For a pictu http://www.automatedaquariums.com/mw_ma957.htm -- |
#9
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![]() "Daniel Morrow" wrote in message ... Bottom posted. fusQuanto wrote: what is a bubble counter and what is its purpose? "George Pontis" wrote: Far Thunder wrote: hau kolas..curious to know what folks here use for dispersal of co2..and which is "best"..the glass/ceramic diffusers or the powered/passive reactor chambers..or running the co2 gas outlet into the intake of a canister filter? TIA lila pilamaya The Eheim glass/ceramic diffuser is problematic for may people due to clogging and the unusually high pressure required to unseat the checkvalve. The simple Hagen bubble ladder is easy to use and inexpensive. Also, it serves the need for a bubble counter. If you can hide one in your tank it is worth considering. I have experience with one in a 20G and a 125G tank. The 125G is way beyond the recommended size for this component, but it is possible to get CO2 up to 20ppm or so with a high flow rate like 5+ bubbles per second. A diffuser would be the deluxe solution, especially if you already have external plumbing. It has the advantages of being completely hidden and capable of high infusion rates. I think a bubble counter is a device that lets you calculate how much co2 is really getting into the water and it allows the bubbles more time to dissolve when compared to straight emitting the bubble into the bottom of the tank because with the bubble counter the co2 bubble is in contact with the water for a much longer amount of time. slightly different take on the bubble counter. It's there to measure rate. Find out how many bubbles per minute and keep a record of bubbles per minute and the Ph level. The more bubbles per minute, the more Co2 and (hopefully) a corresponding decrease in Ph level. Bubble counters are inline between the pressure regulator and the reactor or delivery system in the aquarium. My bubble counter is made from a juice jug, stopper and some rigid tube. Works GREAT and gives me an accurate count (rate) of delivery so I can adjust the Co2 in measured amounts. HTH, DJay |
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