Haha Capricorn farm boss and his helper.
Haha Capricorn farm boss and his helper.
Learning the hardway, not the highway.
Photo Blog - impervious-endeavors.blogspot.com
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"if he cant be bothered to take the time to write his question properly, why should I take the time to answer him."
Interesting, i was initially expecting you to place the output pipes at the far ends of the tank and the input pipes at the base of the L-shape, so both flow would end at the same area to cover the dead spot that would tend to occur there (where your large rooty wood piece is positioned).
When i saw the zig-zag design on your tank, i thought it was meant to fit into a cornice feature against the wall corners of your room... turns out its for mounting the outflow pipes at those sides, that's a very innovative design and layout too.
Learning the hardway, not the highway.
Photo Blog - impervious-endeavors.blogspot.com
Semi-Active currently
"if he cant be bothered to take the time to write his question properly, why should I take the time to answer him."
For a 5feet length on each side, in order for the out flow to reach the centre area, considering the outlet is at the opposite ends, the flow must be relatively strong. However, if you have a 30cm depth tank, such a strong flow with just whip up any plants you have. My Eheim filter should not be that strong to reach the entire 5feet.That is why I have the outlet flows at the centre, and my skimmer will make up for the unreachable area at the opposite ends.
Last edited by yangqian; 17th Oct 2013 at 23:24.
Thats an interesting setup too, works like a real river/stream... i guess the flow would probably be slower by the time it turns the corner and reaches the inflow side, but there should still be some flow throughout due to water displacement, the flow at the outflow side would need to be extra strong though.
I was imagining a more conventional setup of the outflow and inflow at each end, was thinking that the direct cross flow from 2 directions could perhaps create some circulation at the corner, something like this:
... just theory though, i have no idea if it would actually work in practice.
You're right, the amount of flow that would be required to push water 5ft all the way across would need to be really strong... so with the tank height considerations, your inflow/outflow plan would be more optimal.
Definitely bookmarking this journal, alot of new stuff to learn!
Last edited by Urban Aquaria; 18th Oct 2013 at 00:27.
Yes, that was one of my initial plan too. Either both inlets and outlets in thd middle. However, I am planning to create a slope in the middle area and have tall plants in that area. I envision an area of cyperus helferi and bolbitis flowing in the direction of a current. Hence, I cannot have the inlets in the middle area or else the inlets will be buried partially in the substrate.
Wow.
Its very interesting.. to me at least. my end to end thing follows my impression of how mother nature does it.. end to end.. then the water evaporate upward or go down into earth as underwater streams - in this case into filters.
I like both UA's and Yang Qian's design for flow.
How come you all have nicer pictures then me... HAHA
but between the 2, i prefer UA's. 2 reasons.
1. I tend to want to mess around with my outflow more often then inlet. so with the outflow at the side, more accessible to my itchy hands.
2. outflows are more directional then inflow. meaning a change in the outflow direction tends to have impact to water circulation. whereas inflow suck water in a omni directional manner. by placing the inflows at the corner, i would have a constant (albeit slower) flow of water around that corner.
my 2 cents.
I am balding but i am still young!
Spent 3 backbreaking hours tying the Bucephalandras onto lava rocks. Bought small lava rocks used as filter media because they are much smaller and easier to use during scaping.
More.
Can share where did you get the bucep from?
That is a lot of Bucep. If got spare can sell some to recover damages.
I second that. Imagine the tank is our earth, inlet is gravity and the outlet is wind. In bigger tank, gravity plays an important role to draw winds (or undercurrent) towards it. Having two inlet placed in the center create stronger gravity (than single inlet). It acts like "black hole" and draw current from both end of the tank towards the core.
Anyway, both concepts are very educational and food for thoughts.
My aquarium blog: http://aquasense-aquasense.blogspot.com/
Work in progress.......
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