One is @robert member since 2011, input DE filtration on R2R search option more thereThinking about a whole system DE filter for my new FOWLR build. Who are some members with them on their FOWLR systems? I would love to ask them a couple questions!
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One is @robert member since 2011, input DE filtration on R2R search option more thereThinking about a whole system DE filter for my new FOWLR build. Who are some members with them on their FOWLR systems? I would love to ask them a couple questions!
None, some large Aquarium institutions run 24/7. DE filters in refugium away from DT. Dosing food in DT. Give corals time to eat before food goes to DE filter. I love it. Some members here run for SPS,LPS, surprisingly and especially for FOWLR.
I bought one of these with the upgraded mag drive, what a mistake. Imagine having to take the mag drive off and try to spin the propeller to get the thing started. Yup. Then sometimes it stopped spinning, unscrew again get started. I should have got the original.I am in the process of upgrading my tank. I have a decision to make on going fallow and keeping two tanks running for 75 days, or moving the fish over during the swap and adding a DE filter.
I had an ick/velvet/fluke outbreak over a year ago that took out 60-70% of my fish population. There were 7 survivors, including three tangs. I have since added a few wrasses, mystery, possum, melanurus, etc... with no sign of ick, but I'm sure it's still in the tank... I know I need to dose with prazipro for some internal parasites (white stringy poop) but I can do that in the "old" tank before moving the fish over.
I found a vendor who sells new Vortex XL filters shipped with the mag drive upgrade installed.
Would really appreciate your thoughts.
Im going to build one like this with a clear canister housing and a reef octopus water blaster 10000. Just haven't figured out the pumbing side yet. Would love to back flush it unstead of unscrewing it.
Well, I will only say that DE filters and parasites have never worked for me.
I would run a Vortex XL and two System One filters simultaneously. It did nothing for ICK and Velvet. Oh...I purchased a Pentair UV filter - oversized to also run in the system.
It did not fix my parasite problem.
My only solution was going fallow for 76 days or whatever @Humblefish wrote. That's it. Don't waste time or money.
I"m not sure. I've used the diatom powder from Vortex and system one and I would assume it's the finest money can buy. I have also purchased bulk pool diatom powder which worked exactly the same as the much more expensive powders. In the end, I'm convinced that a diatom filter does nothing to prevent or even slow parasites.any idea what size micron your diatom powder was rated at? The stuff i got says .5 micron.
Is this guy being disingenuous or deceiving himself? Granted, he uses an oversized unit to clear the infection, but he relies on a hobby grade unit to keep the tank disease free.I've NEVER been able to control parasites with a DE filter either - including a 90,000 gallon tank at a public aquarium. The problem is either too much by-pass of water through the media, or, like UV sterilizers, they cannot control parasites that never get into the water column to be pulled out by them
Jay
No actually not - if I had a 5000 dollar UV system - I would introduce everything into my tankThe fish in that tank look very healthy, not stressed or hiding. I also feel it is a good thing that he introduced an angelfish with spots. I realize you will all disagree with me but that will keep those fish immune and I will also say they will be more immune if he left them alone and didn't use that nuclear reactor thing he has there. :cool:
You're saying the guy in the video is being disingenuous? He claims this is his go-to approach for ich/velvet.How effective any UV or DE filter is, is irrelevant when it comes to ciliate infections. They spend a very short and limited portion of their life cycle free swimming in the water. Their only aim as soon as the tomont ruptures is to attach to a host. The protomonts will form and theronts hatch out exactly where the fish are, which is handily, exactly where the fish sleep.
Unless you have huge pumps pushing large flow through all these areas and enough filtration capacity to filter 100% of the flow at 100% efficacy, through the night, they are going to find a host. They're unlikely to have to circulate the system enough for a filter of any sort to irradiate or catch them before finding a host, therefore these measures are controlling numbers only and in the case of home aquariums and hobbyist equipment, are unlikely to be very successful.
Implement an effective and proper prophylactic QT Process for all fish and you will likely never have a ciliate disease outbreak in your display.