Modded or not this filters real life bio performance is going to be awful.
You have obviously never used an in tank sponge filter which have GREAT bio-capability.
Modded or not this filters real life bio performance is going to be awful.
Your statement above about the air powered use of submerged sponges is correct, its your misconception on the use and application of pump driven circumference filters that is completely flawed (right war, wrong enemy). Make a note of this: "circumference filter tecnology uses low bulk-high density media and is intended for the farthest outer orbit of the filter surface area, and high bulk-low density media is used for the inner orbits progressively. Place your submersible high bulk-high density sponge inside the CFS500 and you will be defeating the whole premise and purpose of circumference filter technology and it will degradate flow, endurance, efficiency and capability. I can say this confidently without need for testing just based on the design premise."You have obviously never used an in tank sponge filter which have GREAT bio-capability.
Place your submersible high bulk-high density sponge inside the CFS500 and you will be defeating the whole premise and purpose of circumference filter technology and it will degradate flow, endurance, efficiency and capability.
I can say this confidently without need for testing just based on the design premise."
My reply that you last responded too was not to you, but to the gentleman that said sponges in general make poor bio-media. He obvisouly had no clue what he was talking about.
Yes I realized later you were correcting taksan, however the promise for circumference design is the same as I have pointed out and as fundamental in principal as your frig water filter, car oil filter, vacuum canister filter, exc, exc. The batting represents the high density you seek but it is relatively thin without depth to take advantage of the large largest orbital circumference surface area not compromised by thick-density,filters designed this way allow dirt absorption without early clogging. Conversely the over-porous inner sponge as taskan unknowingly-correctly points out, represents the low density porous orbits which is normally hollow like in a vacuum or cart filter, that is the trade mark workings of every circumference filter. Even the FX5 when users are smart enough to only place porous media (balls/rings) in the baskets understand this concept. So when I say I know for a fact filling the the center with hi-density foam is a degradation it is based on a simple and self evident principal and no testing is needed to come to that conclusion, like trying to convince me that wearing sun-glasses during the day should also help me see better at night needs no test proofing, it simply isn't true.Same can be said about wrapping your low density sponge in poly batting as well. My intent was not to improve bio-capability using high density foam, it was to increase mechanical filtration and use the filter as a water polisher. The high density foam would substitue for a cart in this case.
My reply that you last responded too was not to you, but to the gentleman that said sponges in general make poor bio-media. He obvisouly had no clue what he was talking about.
Everything must be tested, including your mod vs. the stock design, otherwise it is nothing more than a theory.
The surface area of a average 30 ppi medium pore density sponge is over 50 times less then the surface area of a sintered glass media like Seachem matrix or Fluval Biomax.
When it comes to biomedia its all about total surface area and sponges don't cut it against modern alternatives.
So when I say I know for a fact filling the the center with hi-density foam is a degradation it is based on a simple and self evident principal and no testing is needed to come to that conclusion, like trying to convince me that wearing sun-glasses during the day should also help me see better at night needs no test proofing, it simply isn't true.
I have to take issue with this statement. First, once again let me re-iterate I was only talking about using a higher density foam for a means of better mechanical filtration with no regards to bio filtration as I would want to use the filter as a water polisher. If it clogs great, that means it is doing its job and I simply take the sponge out and wash it out and replace.
And gunner, when push comes to shove, all you have designed is a basic sponge filter wrapped in poly batting and placed it within a canister. Sponge fitlers are the original circumference filter. You could have essentially done the same thing even cheaper if you took a sponge filter like I linked above and used a small powerhead instead of an airline and installed it like you would a UGF (the powerhead) and placed it directly in the tank.
Your also missing some key elements in your explanation by making the assumption that water will draw through your sponge equally at its entire surface area, when in practice quite the opposite will be true. This is exactly why you need testing. Water will draw down the input tube and fill the canister around the perimeter of the sponge. The sponge will draw the majority of its water in at the point of least resistance and highest suction. This will be the bottom 1/4 of your sponge nearest the motor. Only when this area starts to accumulate blockage will it then draw a larger percentage of its draw further up the sponge and farther away from the motor.
Every filter that is designed to perform both mechanical and bio-logical filtration is a compromise on both. What you have done is to actually reduce the amount of material that can be populated by good bacteria. What you have gained is a filter less likely to clog and lose flow. Not saying it is good/bad/ or indifferent, just a modified design with a different set of compromises than that of the original.
Now, as to what density foam would provide the best overall performance for you re-design, I can't tell. It could be the sponge supplied with the filter as you have used, it could be any measure of material slighty denser or slight less dense. However, when the filter was originally designed, I think its a pretty good bet a third variable was part of the equation, and that is cost. In other words, they put the cheapest sponge in the filter that would get the job done satisfactory.