4ft River tank with too much back flow :- like a whirlpool
Posted: Mon Jun 07, 2010 10:11 pm
Hi all.
Since I first saw a hillstream loach a few months ago at my local bulk goods pet store I have fallen in love with the idea of creating a River tank for their specific display/keeping.
I have a 4ft tank, 18x18 high and wide. I've made a under-substrate manifold using2x 3.5ft lengths of 25mm plumbing PVC pipe, with 2 intake sponges connected at one end, and 2 power heads at the other.
I filled it up for the first time last night, and now I'm wishing that I had have trialed it all before putting my DIY planted tank substrate and then gravel/sand in.
When I turn on one pump, it starts sucking water through the adjasent pump, as well as the two filters at the other end. But the water flow is so strong that it blasts water in a massive circle around the tank.
When I turn the other pump on, the problem gets worse.
What I was hoping to see was most of the water get sucked into the sponges, and the water only flow in the one direction.
My intakes are the sponge assemblies from the large internal filters. The power heads are the the pump assemblies from the same large internal filters. They all match the pipe work perfectly, but clearly the sponges aren't adequate at handling the high rate of flow that the pumps can output.
So, my question to my fellow internet River-tankers is this.... what have I done wrong?
1. Do i need more pipes going the length of the tank to help with flow?
2. Do I need more intake points? More sponges on extra risers?
3. Do my existing sponge intakes restrict the flow due to the plastic surrounds, etc?
I bought 6 Gastromyzons last night, and they are temporarily being kept in a 12x12 inch tank that is very mature and very covered in lovely thick algae... so they are happily in a good place, albeit there is no flow in that tank with the only filtration and water movement being provided by a very very small powerhead that is blowing water down one side creating an inch of raised water/wave that the little fellas love playing in.
I have pics, but I'm not sure how to load them.
Matt
Since I first saw a hillstream loach a few months ago at my local bulk goods pet store I have fallen in love with the idea of creating a River tank for their specific display/keeping.
I have a 4ft tank, 18x18 high and wide. I've made a under-substrate manifold using2x 3.5ft lengths of 25mm plumbing PVC pipe, with 2 intake sponges connected at one end, and 2 power heads at the other.
I filled it up for the first time last night, and now I'm wishing that I had have trialed it all before putting my DIY planted tank substrate and then gravel/sand in.
When I turn on one pump, it starts sucking water through the adjasent pump, as well as the two filters at the other end. But the water flow is so strong that it blasts water in a massive circle around the tank.
When I turn the other pump on, the problem gets worse.
What I was hoping to see was most of the water get sucked into the sponges, and the water only flow in the one direction.
My intakes are the sponge assemblies from the large internal filters. The power heads are the the pump assemblies from the same large internal filters. They all match the pipe work perfectly, but clearly the sponges aren't adequate at handling the high rate of flow that the pumps can output.
So, my question to my fellow internet River-tankers is this.... what have I done wrong?
1. Do i need more pipes going the length of the tank to help with flow?
2. Do I need more intake points? More sponges on extra risers?
3. Do my existing sponge intakes restrict the flow due to the plastic surrounds, etc?
I bought 6 Gastromyzons last night, and they are temporarily being kept in a 12x12 inch tank that is very mature and very covered in lovely thick algae... so they are happily in a good place, albeit there is no flow in that tank with the only filtration and water movement being provided by a very very small powerhead that is blowing water down one side creating an inch of raised water/wave that the little fellas love playing in.
I have pics, but I'm not sure how to load them.
Matt