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Best airstones/diffusers for aeration?
I have CO2 setup and I want to run a small air pump on a timer opposite
of my lighting schedule to help with aeration. Are there any particular airstones or diffusers that are better than the rest? Should I put the airstone or diffuser on the bottom of the tank or is it OK attached via suction cup a few inches from the surface? Thanks for any input, Scott |
#2
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Quote:
It's common to put airsones at the bottom of your tank or even below the gravel as they aren't always the prettiest of things!! |
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I can't recommend a good air stone as I don't use them. However, I do know
a major difference between the air stones is how well the stone stays together and how well the plastic coupler stays together. In the past I have had trouble with the stone slowly falling apart and the plastic coupler breaking away from the stone. Both of these greatly decrease the number of bubbles and therefore the total surface area of them. So I ended up replacing the air stone frequently to get good results. I would think there are some high quality air stones made of a material which won't have these issues. "Aqua Essentials" wrote in message ... Wrote: I have CO2 setup and I want to run a small air pump on a timer opposite of my lighting schedule to help with aeration. Are there any particular airstones or diffusers that are better than the rest? Should I put the airstone or diffuser on the bottom of the tank or is it OK attached via suction cup a few inches from the surface? Thanks for any input, Scott Most airstones do a fairly similar job so I wouldn't worry whether one does a better job or not. All airstones do is disturb the surface of your aquarium and therefore increase oxygen absorption. It's common to put airsones at the bottom of your tank or even below the gravel as they aren't always the prettiest of things!! -- Aqua Essentials |
#5
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"Paul A. Ergh" wrote in message ... I can't recommend a good air stone as I don't use them. However, I do know a major difference between the air stones is how well the stone stays together and how well the plastic coupler stays together. In the past I have had trouble with the stone slowly falling apart and the plastic coupler breaking away from the stone. Both of these greatly decrease the number of bubbles and therefore the total surface area of them. So I ended up replacing the air stone frequently to get good results. I would think there are some high quality air stones made of a material which won't have these issues. Use my method, not the vinegar method for truly long lasting airstones - http://www.fishkeepingbanter.com/q-t...ead-the-word-U pdate!.html . Later! "Aqua Essentials" wrote in message ... Wrote: I have CO2 setup and I want to run a small air pump on a timer opposite of my lighting schedule to help with aeration. Are there any particular airstones or diffusers that are better than the rest? Should I put the airstone or diffuser on the bottom of the tank or is it OK attached via suction cup a few inches from the surface? Thanks for any input, Scott Most airstones do a fairly similar job so I wouldn't worry whether one does a better job or not. All airstones do is disturb the surface of your aquarium and therefore increase oxygen absorption. It's common to put airsones at the bottom of your tank or even below the gravel as they aren't always the prettiest of things!! -- Aqua Essentials |
#6
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"Daniel Morrow" wrote in message
... "Aqua Essentials" wrote in message ... Wrote: I have CO2 setup and I want to run a small air pump on a timer opposite of my lighting schedule to help with aeration. Are there any particular airstones or diffusers that are better than the rest? Should I put the airstone or diffuser on the bottom of the tank or is it OK attached via suction cup a few inches from the surface? Thanks for any input, Scott Most airstones do a fairly similar job so I wouldn't worry whether one does a better job or not. All airstones do is disturb the surface of your aquarium and therefore increase oxygen absorption. I think they might do a little more than that - the bubbles they emit have a higher air to water surface area than if they (the airstone) were never used. Netmax? If the op has his/her own heavy duty air pump I would recommend a ceramic airstone, otherwise I would recommend the rena ceramic airstones the most to the op. Good luck and later! My understanding is that the longer the airstone bubble's contact time is, the more effective it will be in bringing the dissolved gases ratio to equilibrium with the atmosphere. Putting the airstone lower in the tank helps with this and has the added benefit of providing some turbulence in the tank (making the O2 and temperature distribution more uniform). Your application will determine if these characteristics are really of use to you, or you just want to increase surface turbulence (break up the protein layer and dissipate a bit more CO2). Your most effective dissipation of CO2 would come from the airstone being lower (drawing the higher CO2/lower O2 water from the bottom, up to the surface), but again, depends on your application (small or high fish-load, % of plants, ppm difference in CO2 levels at the extremes, etc etc ad nauseum ;~). While there are differences in the quality of an airstone's output (uniformity, longevity, size of bubbles, head pressure needed etc), I haven't tested enough different types (long term) to make any comparisons or useful recommendations, other than to consider adding a prefilter (small in-line container with cotton) to prevent dust from accumulating inside the airstone (which is a typical cause of their eventual clogging). hth -- www.NetMax.tk It's common to put airsones at the bottom of your tank or even below the gravel as they aren't always the prettiest of things!! -- Aqua Essentials |
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