neoprodigy;2278497; said:im going to do similar type of setup... except i will add air stone on the bottom and blow air up...
my sump will be a rubbermaid stock tub setup either a 100gallon ([FONT=Arial,Helvetica,Geneva,Swiss,SunSans-Regular]52"L x 31"W x 25"H)[/FONT] or 150gallon ([FONT=Arial,Helvetica,Geneva,Swiss,SunSans-Regular]58"L x 39"W x 25"H)[/FONT]Dr Joe;2281452;2281452 said:What size?
polish;2281505;2281505 said:This doesn't seem that new to me, I mean all my canister filters and HOB filters have the media fully submerged. How is this different other than using a sump style setup?
Dr Joe;856405; said:MilitantPotato,
Even confusion runs amuck in my brain...Did you mean what I read or what you said?
That is exactly what MilitantPotato said.johnptc;858053; said:i believe the potato got his facts scrambled....![]()
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sounds like lots of O2 in air and very little in water and hence bio media exposed to the atmosphere would have lots more O2... no ???
neoprodigy;2281684; said:yes.. filtration is actually an old old idea... its the same concept as gravel is a medium of media also. the concept is to show that you dont need wet/dry on the media.. you can just pack the media...
the more media .. the more you can stock your tank...Merbeast;2282762;2282762 said:Barring the need for a more compact unit, what would the advantage be to switching to fully submersed media? If you have room for a 100 gallon stock tank, why not make it a wet/dry? You will save money on the filter media as you can use less to do more. Just wondering.
Agreed , thinking about doing this myself , eventually my filter would rivel my tanks capacity , so ill pack in the fishneoprodigy;2286327; said:the more media .. the more you can stock your tank...