CHOMPERS;573993; said:1. Yes
2. Yes
3. No
4. No. I thought a picture of a sump and a wet/dry on the same system was clear enough.
Ok disregard question #3, im thinking of a wet/dry.
Is your #4 answer for my question #5?
CHOMPERS;573993; said:1. Yes
2. Yes
3. No
4. No. I thought a picture of a sump and a wet/dry on the same system was clear enough.
JESTERX626;573998; said:Ok disregard question #3, im thinking of a wet/dry.
Is your #4 answer for my question #5?
JESTERX626;574002; said:...And would the custom tank specs I listed, work well even though its very much elongated?
CHOMPERS;574006; said:A long tank lends well for a sump filter, but you could have one or two spray bars down the whole length of it as a wet/dry filter.
That isn't what I was thinking but it will work. You could combine them by buying two identical containers, stacking them so the wet/dry sits over the sump. You would want to let the water from the wet/dry run into the sump through a hole in the bottom of the wet/dry located on the end that the water enters the sump. (The water in a wet/dry flows from top to bottom, where the water in a sump flows from side to side.)JESTERX626;574289; said:So are you saying I could combine both sump and wet/dry together or do you mean just turn it 100% into a wet/dry?
yes, a spray bar is a pipe with holes that spray water. The spray bar can be held above the media or it can be placed directly on top of the media for super quiet operation. The number of spray bars is dependent on the size and shape of your design. The spray bars can also be replaced with a drip plate. That is a tray with numerous holes drilled in the bottom.JESTERX626;574289; said:A spray bar is that one, or two pipes that have holes in them that spew water right?
JESTERX626;574289; said: