cwrenge
Well-known member
All great stuff.... my brain is full of more wonder....as the talk/exchange of sustrates.... what about ..." MUD-FILTERS..." ? if we can actually stir a mud filter....(in operation that is ) would this not be a great benifit to any DSB system....? some how i keep wondering that it would...! and i trust the info thats in this thread.... Gggggggggggge its wonderfull to read what/how you guys go about understanding these things, thanks , cw.aquariumdebacle said:I have been trying to keep these thoughts private as I would like to gain some empirical evidence to back up my claims. It seems to me as though the substrate should not matter in a properly designed system whether it is a bare-bottom or a deep sand bed system. If the substrate is not allowed to accumulate or "sink" organic material it should work just like a system with no substrate at all. What difference would it make if the substrate was solid? The accumulation is from nutrients creeping into (sinking) the substrate. If this not allowed with proper waterflow it seems to follow logically that the substrate is taken out of the equation entirely.
What I propose and will attempt to verify experimentally is putting the whole sandbed into the equation by having a very subtle flow of water on the magnitude of weeks turnover rate constantly pushing water up through the substrate creating an artificial convection current that will still be lacking oxygen. With an upward flow of water it would resist the gravitational tendency for sand beds to accumulate organic material.
The rest of the system will be the same with high water flow and vigorous protein skimming. I am not so sure of the phosphate removal in this proposal. It might have to follow the frequent water change maintenance schedule, in which case I'm sure Mikey would love to invite me over for a large dinner of small annoying black birds. It seems to me that, like my brain, a deep sand bed is only utilizing a small amount of its true carrying capacity. That and it is not saturated with enough alcohol! I plan to populate the system with schooling fish and then feed them with automatic feeders; to get an idea of the input involved and the resulting processing of the organics. I won't attempt invertrabrates unless I can get the parameters within reason (i.e. <1ppm phosphate, <2ppm nitrate, etc.)
a doo Ron Ron, a doo Ron Ron! Not ready to give up on the concept of DSB's!