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THE INS AND OUTS OF KOI POND BUILDING
by Mike White, White Water Filters
PART 8: Fluid Bed, Bio-Reactors and
Nexus Filters
IIn the last
two issues, I discussed the different types of filters on the market.
This article will continue the filter discussion by covering fluid
bed, bio-reactors and Nexus filters.
What is a fluid bed filter? It is a bed
of media that is fluidized in water. The pond water is pumped in
the bottom of the bed and flows out the top to the pond. Since the
bed is in constant suspension and movement it can handle large amounts
of ammonia with a small amount of media. Different types of sand
are usually used for the media.
The trick with these filters is if the
flow of water is too slow, the bed won't be fluidized and if the
flow is too strong, the bed will be too fluid and flow out the top
of the filter and into the pond. The correct flow rate is fairly
slow, therefore these filters are capable of doing an excellent
job of handing both ammonia and nitrite. A small amount of media
can handle a fairly heavy fish load.
A good example of this is a 75 gallon aquarium
I have at my office. This aquarium has a small fluid bed filter
on it with about 2 oz. of sand in it. I have kept as many as ten
6 to 8" koi in this tank with no problems at all.
All this makes this sound like the ideal
filter. So why don't we see one on every pond?
The reason you don't often see them on
ponds is because they can be very temperamental. If anything starts
to clog up the sand, the bed may collapse or if the water flow is
turned off for even a short period of time, it might not fluidize
the bed again. Once this happens it can be very hard to get it going
again. Ponds by their very nature create a great deal of debris.
Not only from the fish but also from the environment. If even a
small amount of this debris gets into the fluid bed filter it can
and will cause problems.
Returning to my earlier example of the
fish tank in my office, the one thing I did not tell you is that
there is a huge pre-filter before the pump to keep any debris out
of the filter. Now you can see why these filters are not often seen
on ponds.
A closely related filter is a bio-reactor.
This is a vessel with a media that is called kaldness in it. At
the bottom of this soup of water and kaldness lots of air is bubbled
in to churn this mixture and to give the bacteria on the kaldness
all the oxygen that it can use. Pond water is pumped in on one side
and flows out the other side, returning back to the pond by gravity.
Because of the action of the media and the oxygen, this filter is
able to adjust to changing fish loads very quickly. It can handle
larger fish loads very easily. Because kaldness, which is a plastic
cylinder about ½" long and 3/8" in diameter with
a center cross piece, is a lot larger than sand it does not clog
up like the fluid bed filter. The kaldness is held in suspension
with the buoyancy of the plastic and the air bubbling and not as
a result of water flow.
I use this type of filter on my large fish
sale vats when there is a tremendous fish load. It is not at all
unusual to have well over 100 fish that range from 6" to 16".
We have not problem with ammonia or nitrite in 600 gallons of water.
What are the down sides of these filters?
First, the flow rates through most of the bio-reactors is on the
low side. Algae will tend to clog up the kaldness media and result
in it no longer churning and losing its effectiveness. Because of
this some type of pre-filter should be used. In addition, this type
of filter has no mechanical filtering capability. This is strictly
a biological filter which brings us to the next type of filter.
The Nexus take the principles of the bio-reactor
and combines them with a mechanical filter. The inner chamber is
a small vortex settling chamber. The filter comes with a strainer
to filter any water leaving the inner chamber for the outer chamber.
A unit called the "answer" is an optional replacement
for the strainer. The Answer is a stainless steel screen that has
a pump that sprays water through a rotating sprayer from the inside
to attempt to make it "self-cleaning" unit. The next chamber
that the water flows to is the outer chamber, filled with kaldness
with air bubbling in it. From there it flows out of the filter.
This filter can be either gravity or pump
fed. If it is gravity fed, it has to be set so the water level in
the inner chamber is the same level as the pond water level.
I know this sounds like it has all the
qualities of the perfect filter, but as I have said before there
is no such thing as the perfect filter.
What is the problem with the Nexus filter?
The major problem is the straining device between the inner and
outer chambers. If the Nexus is pump fed and this strainer clogs
up, the filter could overflow. Because of this possibility, it is
essential to be sure that the strainer doesn't clog. The way the
unit is designed it is necessary to make sure that the strainer
on the output side doesn't clog up either.
In the next issue, I will conclude
the filter discussion and then move on to ultra violet lights.
Part
1 - Planning a New Pond || Part
2 - Design || Part 3 - Circulation
|| Part 4 - Mechanical and Chemical
Filtration || Part 5 - Biological
Filtration || Part 6 - Biological
Filters - Mats, Pads and Biofalls || Part
7 - Biological Filters - Bead, Tower and Vortex Filters || Part
8 - Fluid Bed, Bio-Reactors and Nexus Filters || Part
9 - Planning for Pond Expansion
©2004 all rights reserved to Mike White
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