clayton
Member
Heres some notes on the theory behing wet/dry filters (especialy for Polka).
All a biological filter is, is a place for bacteria to live. The bacteria eat the animal waste (basicly). Whether they live in the gravel of your U/G or your canister filter or your wet/dry, they are all the same. Three main things govern the amount of bacteria that will colonise: 1)the amount of food available. 2)the surface area available to live on. 3)the amount of oxygen available.
It is often the amount of oxygen available that is the limiting factor.
In a wet/dry filter, the water is broken up into drops or trickles that fall down over a filter medium. The filter medium is not submerged in water. This means that there is far more oxygen available to the bacteria as the water flows over them. The filter medium used is usualy some form of spiked, plastic balls, although many things can be used - 'Stickle Bricks', hair curlers etc. The idea is to split the water into the smallest drops possible and slow it down as much as possible as it passes over the 'dry' part of the filter. Research has shown that 10 times the number of bacteria can colonise on a 'dry' filter medium as could if it were submerged.
These things are easy to make in a small seperate tank that sits under your main tank. The water syphons out of the tank, through the filter and is then pumped back up into the tank. See Martin Moe's "Marine Systems and Maintenance" for easy to follow directions.
The other advantage of wet/dry filters is that you can try to incorporate Gaseous Exchange Filters, but thats another kettle of fish............
All a biological filter is, is a place for bacteria to live. The bacteria eat the animal waste (basicly). Whether they live in the gravel of your U/G or your canister filter or your wet/dry, they are all the same. Three main things govern the amount of bacteria that will colonise: 1)the amount of food available. 2)the surface area available to live on. 3)the amount of oxygen available.
It is often the amount of oxygen available that is the limiting factor.
In a wet/dry filter, the water is broken up into drops or trickles that fall down over a filter medium. The filter medium is not submerged in water. This means that there is far more oxygen available to the bacteria as the water flows over them. The filter medium used is usualy some form of spiked, plastic balls, although many things can be used - 'Stickle Bricks', hair curlers etc. The idea is to split the water into the smallest drops possible and slow it down as much as possible as it passes over the 'dry' part of the filter. Research has shown that 10 times the number of bacteria can colonise on a 'dry' filter medium as could if it were submerged.
These things are easy to make in a small seperate tank that sits under your main tank. The water syphons out of the tank, through the filter and is then pumped back up into the tank. See Martin Moe's "Marine Systems and Maintenance" for easy to follow directions.
The other advantage of wet/dry filters is that you can try to incorporate Gaseous Exchange Filters, but thats another kettle of fish............