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Lowest cost way to eliminate green hair, bubble & turf

Aqui você vai encontrar os tópicos que se sobressaem devido ao volume de informação.
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antonio carvalho
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Re: Lowest cost way to eliminate green hair, bubble & turf

#61 Mensagem por antonio carvalho »

on every corner here has acarajé seller, and axezeiro pagodeiro is everywhere!
Sorry, your lordship over rock does not understand anything!
a weak hug
Voltando para o Marinho!
Saudades de todos!

SantaMonicaHelp
Pseudocheilinus hexataenia
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Re: Lowest cost way to eliminate green hair, bubble & turf

#62 Mensagem por SantaMonicaHelp »

Elder Luis escreveu:do you have any video of it? is there so many bubble?


Video of first cleaning after 9 days of growth from a new screen:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h0K4UCp9_aA

Video of 7 days of growth after the first cleaning:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o14culabk7k

These links from post above can give you a idea how the bubbles look like.

SantaMonicaHelp
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Re: Lowest cost way to eliminate green hair, bubble & turf

#63 Mensagem por SantaMonicaHelp »

Some success stories of people using waterfall algae scrubbers on different sites:

Aydee on the scrubber site: "I'm going to call this a success. My nitrates had been sitting steady at about 10 or so for over a year. For it to drop to undetectable in 2 weeks.. THAT is impressive. I have got my skimmer running still, but once my ATS is running, I'll turn off the skimmer (not remove.. Yet....) If situation remains excellent as the trend currently is, I'll remove the skimmer. However, I came into ATS thinking "It can't hurt, as I'll keep my skimmer running" and now I'm thinking "WOAH! They're right!".
Obviously, the proof will be in 2 years time, ATS sans skimmer.. But.. So far, the numbers are fantastic."

Robert_Patterso on the RC site: "Best thing I have ever put on any of my tanks in over 25 years of being in the hobby"

Pskelton on the RC site: "I personally have not done a water change in 6 months ever since I implemented my scrubber. long story short my tank was a mess, kid dumped container of food in tank. I got a snow flake eel that dug up my sand bed and I was running a very under powered cheep skimmer. This lead to my nitrates peeking at 160. I did water changes for a while but the nitrate just keep coming back up to 160. The water changes were getting expensive and I was about to give up when I tried the scrubber. Within a few weeks nitrate dropped to 60 and slowly came down from there. As of my test last week I am finally at 0 nitrate and I haven't done a water change in six months. The protean skimmer has been removed and my tank is healthier than ever. I am just waiting for the algae on my rocks to finish dieing off."

Murph on the scrubber site: "my ATS is coming along fine. I think I spent about 30 bucks making it. When I compare that to the thousand or more I have spent on skimmers over the past ten years or so that made little to no difference when it came to nuisance algae in the display I want to pull my hair out. My ATS has out done them all in a matter of a few months."

Spotter on the RC site: "Nitrate Day 1: 5ppm, Week 1: 0ppm, Week 2: 0ppm. P04 Day 1: .035,
Week 1: .015, Week 2: .0092 I am liking this very much."

JohnnyB_in_SD on the RC site: "I feed about 6-7 cubes a day on a 100gl tank, and 10-12 cubes two days a week when I do the nems & corals too. N&P have been undetectable since I started using ATS, which is a mickey mouse rubber maid tub version. Since I am always looking for the easiest way to do everything, I will continue cleaning the whole screen once a week. For me, it was a real struggle maintaining water quality with just a fuge: starving my fish, super skimming, massive weekly water changes - just to keep Nitrates near 20ppm and Phosphate under 1.0. That all went away with an ATS, the hobby is much more enjoyable and not a huge chore."

Thedude657 on the scrubber site: "So my screen finally filled out with greenish algae. Water quality is excellent and now I have all sorts of cool things growing on my live rock. Little white sponges are popping up everywhere, some stuff I have no clue what it is yet. Just wanted to say thanks to help me get started."

Chrisfraser05 on the RC site: "I just wanted to jump in and say after bumping into Santamonica on a forum a while back and also watching Lafishguys videos I started a marine tank [8 months ago]. Obviously I started my first tank with a DIY algae scrubber and have NEVER seen either nitrate or phosphate."

Redneckgearhead on the scrubber site: "Heres the pics of my HA problem. [algea all over]These where taken just before I added my scrubber. I had tried EVERYTHING nothing helped. I paid a small fortune for a skimmer that I was told would surely take care of the problem. The HA laughed and kept on growing. My lights where down to 3 hours a day, my fish where only fed a small amount every two to three days, I was doing 10 percent water changes twice a week. And keep in mind those picks are only about 3 days growth, I would remove about 80 percent of the HA during my water changes. These are pics I took today just before my weekly water change. [almost no algae] I am feeding daily, my fish are now fat and happy. My scrubber is working beautifully! I am so glad I found out about scrubbers. I am still using my skimmer, but I may take it off line as soon as all the HA is gone. From the looks of things that shouldn't be much longer."

Fragglerocks on the RC site: "Ive gotten rid of 95% of all "bad" algae in the DT and my P04 Level is 0.12 checked by Hanna meter. Nitrates - Zero. I feed the equivalent of 2 frozen cubes per day, along with pellets whenever I think about it. up to 2 times per day."

Scrubit on the scrubber site: "have been running a scrubber-only 90gal tank for over a year now with great success. [...] I was ready to buy a big ol skimmer for my new tank build when I came across some of the info SM had posted. That was all it took, and I've never looked back. NEVER had algae in DT, NEVER had readable nitrates/phos after cycle, and have probably changed out maybe 40gal of water since setup. Personally I find running a scrubber almost as fun as the tank itself!"

Psyops on the RC site: "I had a DSB and chaeto fuge. When I added a ATS, the chaeto disappeared. I don't know if the DSB is doing anything. I feed my fish and tank from 1-2 times daily depending on my schedule. The ATS is doing really well, especially when I added a Calcium reactor 3 months ago. I did not believe some of the stuff people were saying on how effective an ATS system could be, but they were mostly correct."

JohnnyBinSD on the RC site: "I finally got around to putting an ATS on my tank 3 weeks ago. Just harvested a pile of algae off it tonight. In those 3 weeks I have doubled the amount of daily food I put in the tank, run the skimmer 6 hours/day instead of 24/7, and removed the lighting from the chaeto in the old fuge. Nitrates & phosphates are undetectable, algae in the display tank is almost nonexistent, fish are fat & happy. An ATS is the cheapest & most effective thing I've ever done to improve water quality. I wish I had built one sooner."

Kcmopar on the MFT site: "Its been about 5 weeks (started the weekend before fathers day) or so and the green hair algae has stopped growing in my 40G. Yeah!!! Its all receding, maybe just a few percent left at the base of a couple rocks that my coral beauty snacks on. Just amazing. Started this 40G salt from Jump with an ATS. IT NEVER CYCLED!!! I have little pods, tiny feather dusters, and other critters thriving like crazy. Coraline already starting to spread across the tank. Nutrients are always zero to just barely detectable on both the 10g and 40g. Also a note on the 40G, I never had to do a water change yet!!! No test results ever got past barely detectable. I have been dabbling with an ATS on a 10 gallon Freshwater as well. Same results so far. I am building a bigger one for my 150G FW in a few weeks."

Reeftanker on the MFUK site: "i have cleaned it about 8/10 times now, about 50-90 grams of algae each time and i have just tsted my tank i have on my test kits; Phosphates = clear that means undetectable levels on my test kit, Nitrates = 1ppm maybe 2ppm, what more do i have to say im am chuffed to bits and over the moon"

Etan on the MFUK site: "Just to share some of my results with my scrubber. I set up my new tank at beginning of Jan(Rio 400). The only filtration I have on the tank is a scrubber and about 50kg of live rock. After the tank had cycled my nitrates peaked at about 25ppm about 2 weeks ago. There were only 2 clowns and 2 chromis in tank and small cuc. Just tested today after all stock and cuc from old tank have been in there for about 1 week and nitrate reading is only 2ppm and not much signs of algee in main tank or on glass. It seems to me the scrubber is doing its job."

Weatherby68ss on the scrubber site: "i have been into this hobby for 3 years now and was using a wet /dry filter for the first year and a half or so untill i found out about algae scrubbers. i have to admit i would not still have an aquarium if not for my ats. its simply to much time, work and $$$ using any other type of filtration. with the ats i can actually sit back and enjoy my tank and keep my fish fat and happy with out worrying about the next water change because i hav'nt done 1 in over a year! :D anyone thats thinking about building 1 all i can say is go for it THEY WORK!!! nuff said"

Mgraf on the RC site: "I have been running a scrubber for about 8 months now, at first I had a skimmer running, macro's, rock rubble, and deep sand bed. Same setup as you almost. I still have the deep sand bed but, eliminated the other stuff over time for the sake of simplicity. I clean the scrubbers algae once a week, do monthly water changes, feed often and alot, and my corals and fish have never been happier or fatter in the year and a half it has been set up. Many may disagree but, for me it is the easiest way to run a salt water reef."

Jukka on the RC site: "I used to have various carbon sources + ATB Supersize skimmer as filtration for my 400 gal reef. I never succeeded to outcompete nutrient problems with those, no matter how much carbon I added. I also tried the pellet version. Since building a large scrubber with lots of light, all problems are gone. But I didn't take the skimmer out of the system and didn't stop carbon dosing, and don't intend to. I just reduced carbon amount to about 1/10 of the original. I like the effects carbon does for fungi, and other stuff like that, growth. Though other reason for keeping skimmer online is the amount I paid for the supersize ATB.

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Elder Luis
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Re: Lowest cost way to eliminate green hair, bubble & turf

#64 Mensagem por Elder Luis »

:shock:

WOW, sounds great!
Guia sobre BBT: viewtopic.php?f=53&t=9251
Balling: viewtopic.php?f=2&t=19273

Viva Metal!

SantaMonicaHelp
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Re: Lowest cost way to eliminate green hair, bubble & turf

#65 Mensagem por SantaMonicaHelp »

Some UAS builds...

"Acorral" on the scrubber site:
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"Badfish" on the RC site:
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"Cmaxtian" on the scrubber site:
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"Deneed4spd" onthe TCMAS site:
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"Ewerd" on the scrubber site:
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"Fishuntbike" on the scrubber site:
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"FloydRturbo" on the scrubber site:
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"Hugbert" on the scrubber site:
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"Jaz" on the scrubber site:
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"Kalgra" on the R2R site:
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"KelliZackMOMon"on the LR site:
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"MorganAtlanta"on the scrubber site;
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"Octavia-vrs"on the UR site:
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"Othello"on the scrubber site:
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"OwenReefin"on the PNWMAS site:
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"Pecker115"on the UR site:
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"Cermet" on the AC site:
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"Promazine"on the UR site:
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"Bobba" on the scrubber site:
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"Reefnjunkie"on the PNWMAS site:
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"RkyRickstr"on the scrubber site:
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"Ruddybop"on the MFK site:
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"Smann" on the PNWMAS site:
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"Strayrex" on the UR site:
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"Swhite" on the scrubber site:
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"Tonymar"on the scrubber site:
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Raphael Igor
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Re: Lowest cost way to eliminate green hair, bubble & turf

#66 Mensagem por Raphael Igor »

:shock: :shock: :shock:


clapping_02 clapping_02 clapping_02 clapping_02

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Frederico Ramos
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Re: Lowest cost way to eliminate green hair, bubble & turf

#67 Mensagem por Frederico Ramos »

Eu venho falando sobre o ATS há tempos com excelentes resultados pessoais. Mas o ATS que eu uso é o modelo tradicional, tipo cachoeira. Eu não curto esse modelo tipo cortina de ar pois sou averso à bolhas, que jogam sal para todo lado.

I´ve talking about ATS usage for a long time, I had excelent results. The model I use is the traditional waterfall. I do not like this bubble curtain model because the bubbles splash water and cause salt creep for all around.

Fotos atuais do meu novo modelo usando leds brancos amarelados.

Recent photos of my new model using warm white leds.

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Esse crescimento é logo após a montagem do ATS, com uns 20 dias.

The growth is the first one, 20 days long.

abraço

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Elder Luis
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Re: Lowest cost way to eliminate green hair, bubble & turf

#68 Mensagem por Elder Luis »

wow, nice pics! clapping_02
Guia sobre BBT: viewtopic.php?f=53&t=9251
Balling: viewtopic.php?f=2&t=19273

Viva Metal!

SantaMonicaHelp
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Re: Lowest cost way to eliminate green hair, bubble & turf

#69 Mensagem por SantaMonicaHelp »

Frederico Ramos escreveu:Eu venho falando sobre o ATS há tempos com excelentes resultados pessoais. Mas o ATS que eu uso é o modelo tradicional, tipo cachoeira. Eu não curto esse modelo tipo cortina de ar pois sou averso à bolhas, que jogam sal para todo lado.

I´ve talking about ATS usage for a long time, I had excelent results. The model I use is the traditional waterfall. I do not like this bubble curtain model because the bubbles splash water and cause salt creep for all around.

Fotos atuais do meu novo modelo usando leds brancos amarelados.

Recent photos of my new model using warm white leds.

Esse crescimento é logo após a montagem do ATS, com uns 20 dias.

The growth is the first one, 20 days long.

abraço


Nice growth...

jose Jorge
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Re: Lowest cost way to eliminate green hair, bubble & turf

#70 Mensagem por jose Jorge »

Really...................Really Cool Stuff..................

icon_iCo01

SantaMonicaHelp
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Re: Lowest cost way to eliminate green hair, bubble & turf

#71 Mensagem por SantaMonicaHelp »

I will come back for the questions, but here is the new post. :)
Imagem

SantaMonicaHelp
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Re: Lowest cost way to eliminate green hair, bubble & turf

#72 Mensagem por SantaMonicaHelp »


SantaMonicaHelp
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Re: Lowest cost way to eliminate green hair, bubble & turf

#73 Mensagem por SantaMonicaHelp »

New update:
Imagem

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Ramon Brescovici
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Re: Lowest cost way to eliminate green hair, bubble & turf

#74 Mensagem por Ramon Brescovici »

i'm about to do mine.

my idea comes from the fact that my external overflow box already has algae growth due to the normal light of the aquarium.

so i'll do a horizontal version, using a airpump connected to a tube full of holes disposed like a snake (lack of words in english... in portuguese i would call it "senoidal").

so, no more lights, no space used in the tank or sump.
embora injúrias, insolências e insultos de todo gênero jorrem com inesgotável espontaneidade da alma humana, é infelizmente verdade que nem sempre nos vem à mente no momento exato o impropério mais bem-soante ou a ofensa mais pertinente
Schoppenhauer

SantaMonicaHelp
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Re: Lowest cost way to eliminate green hair, bubble & turf

#75 Mensagem por SantaMonicaHelp »

Ramon Brescovici escreveu:i'm about to do mine.

my idea comes from the fact that my external overflow box already has algae growth due to the normal light of the aquarium.

so i'll do a horizontal version, using a airpump connected to a tube full of holes disposed like a snake (lack of words in english... in portuguese i would call it "senoidal").

so, no more lights, no space used in the tank or sump.


Great, looking forward for your pictures. icon_yes

SantaMonicaHelp
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Re: Lowest cost way to eliminate green hair, bubble & turf

#76 Mensagem por SantaMonicaHelp »

Some more successes from waterfall scrubbers:

Damon on the IM site: "I have been completely skimmer less for over a month now, and my ats has brought my nitrates from off the chart above 50ppm and with yesterday's test it has come down to 5 on the high end with color choosing(can't wait for a Hanna to make a nitrate). I am extremely happy with my ats as it is now, but I do believe I'm going to build a second one next to it. I built this size for a small (75-90g heavy bioload), but I'm going to add a second one that will be a more professional build quality now that I have figured out how I want it to run. I still love the fact that I have dropped $25 a month in electricity, haven't done a water change in a month while still dropping nitrates and getting amazing coral growth. The best part is I am making these to utilize my overflow drains, so in essence I adding a more efficient form of filtration without adding any heat or extra electricity. I can't report on long term results as I've only been running an ats since last fall. But from where my tank was to where it is now is enough for me to jump ship, lol."

Kerry on the scrubber site: "I was hard for me to believe that this device worked. It took about a year before I built one and now I wish I knew about this years ago. Who would have thought algae would provide so much success? I even have one on my 150G FW Jack Dempsey tank as well. And yes, its so nice not to have a skimmer anymore!!!!"

Reefkeeper2 on the RC site: "I run a skimmer, biopellets and an ATS. The skimmer and the pellets worked well keeping nitrates at 0, but there was room for improvement with phosphate control. I tried GFO, and lanthanum. My sps do not like the GFO. I got STN often when I changed it out. The lanthanum worked, but was very labor intensive and so unpractical. The ATS did the trick nicely. I have been a reefer for a very long time. I think I have tried every method of nutrient control thought up by anyone. I really enjoy trying out new ideas and trying to improve on old ones. I have to say that this combination has worked the best of all I have tried over the years."

N728NY on the RC site: "Just chiming in to say I really hope this thread keeps going! Lots of good info. I'm still pretty new to keeping a reef tank. I have been running a scrubber with my skimmer for the past three months. Before then I could never get my nitrates below 15, and since I added my scrubber I never been able to detect any nitrates, even after feeding twice as much. I know with my 75 gallon set up, I made my scrubber slightly over sized (sized for 100 gallons) and I dump huge amounts of pellets and frozen shrimp in my tank on top of spot feeding my corals on a regular basis and I still have yet to register any nitrates on my test kit. Being that I'm still new I still haven't built up the courage to unplug the skimmer yet. I may try it once I know for sure my scrubber is fully matured, got plenty of ro water made up and salt ready just in case I need to do an emergency water change lol. I still have a clump of cheato left that I suppose would be good back up if the scrubber couldn't keep up. The cheato doesn't really grow very much right now because of the scrubber. I love these scrubbers, I'm so glad I took the time to read "both sides" of the arguments on them to find out the facts about them."

Kentth on the scrubber site: "overall the tank is much healthier, a lot of feather dusters, coming out of the rocks, yellow sponges, other opaque sponges. big thing is no water changes for over 8 months, almost no silt, it has really cut my maintenance"

Langtudatinh01 on the RC site: "i completely redo my 40B with the ATS from beginning, i barely see much algae on my display tank but i now have a mature ATS. i relocated all my fish and add another one without any issue. the dead rocks i use bleach quite a lot of phosphate back into the water, but the ATS has handle the issue like a cham. i do not see much algae on my display. everything is green like grass down at the ATS. i am very happy so far.'

Bicolour on the MFUK site: "quick update, so my ats has been running since [6 weeks ago] and i gotta say all the algea in my tank and on the sand has gone, wow. gotta say it was well worth doing. i dont monitor growth at the moment but this is something i will be doing in the future, my set up was basic costing very little as i wanted to try this before i really looked into the idea. very impressed and can only say if you got space look into it"

Rysher on the RC site: "i have a 6x9 screen, 1 inch is submerged so only 6x8 is really used, i also have a 40b. it has been my only form of filtration ever since i started the tank [months ago], i feed almost 2 cubes a day, only have 2 fishes but u cant see any algae on my DT, almost non existent film algae too, i clean my DT glass maybe once a week."

Packman90 on the RC site: "I have a 72 Gallon bow front and until a couple of months ago I was going to throw my tank away and give up on saltwater tanks all together. I was brand new, took a lot of advice, started my system and watched as it became more and more green, until i found out about scrubbers. I lost all of the coral frags I bought, about $400.00 worth, and just felt that I would never get it. I have it now, and just bought my first new frags in over 8 months. Thanks to all of you scrubbers out there who showed me the way. Here is the tank after the scrubber did it's magic. this took a total of 1 month for it to clear up, and I did not remove any of the algae, it just melted a way. Only problem I have is that i have some sea grass that is melting away as well and cheto in my sump is also slowly dieing."

SantaMonicaHelp
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Re: Lowest cost way to eliminate green hair, bubble & turf

#77 Mensagem por SantaMonicaHelp »

Here are the requirements for building a UAS.

Screen material:

1)
Use plastic canvas as the algae screen. Remember to roughen it up properly using a wood saw or hole saw. You can get plastic canvas at craft store (under sewing section) or sewing store or online at places like www.everythingplasticcanvas.com or ebay. Screen should look like this:

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Lighting

2)
The lighting needs to be 1 watt per square inch (6.25 square cm) of screen material. A 3 by 4 inch screen is 12 square inches not 24. Make sure you have enough wattage and use a reflector if the light doesnot focus on screen. For fluorescent bulbs, it needs to have a spectrum of 2700k-3000k. For LEDs, it needs to be red 660nm. You can cut the wattage in half if you are using LED lights. In order for algae to grow, make sure that the light is on for 18 hours a day. Here are some bulbs and reflector type:

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Bubbles:

3)
The bubbles need to be rapid and large and distributed through out the screen evenly for algae to grow. The best way to do this is by slicing the air tubing. Make sure the air pump is good so that the bubbles can constantly flow across the screen for 24 hours a day. This is why you need bubbles:

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Ramon Brescovici
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Re: Lowest cost way to eliminate green hair, bubble & turf

#78 Mensagem por Ramon Brescovici »

my horizontal first atempt is ready. but i got a problem. it floats!
i also didnt find the proper material to the scrub area. didnt find any hard plastic.

pics soon
embora injúrias, insolências e insultos de todo gênero jorrem com inesgotável espontaneidade da alma humana, é infelizmente verdade que nem sempre nos vem à mente no momento exato o impropério mais bem-soante ou a ofensa mais pertinente
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Bruno Braz
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Re: Lowest cost way to eliminate green hair, bubble & turf

#79 Mensagem por Bruno Braz »

Muito legal essa ideia.

Me deu vontade de tentar fazer um protótipo.

Tenho um Nano com 60 Litros (Boyu Tl 450) e utilizo nele um Skimmer CPR Bak Pak 2.

A ideia é usar o compartimento de retorno desse Skimmer:
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Onde consigo esse plastico para fazer a grade?
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Ramon Brescovici
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Re: Lowest cost way to eliminate green hair, bubble & turf

#80 Mensagem por Ramon Brescovici »

Segundo o fred tem em agropecuaria, eu tbm to tentando achar.
embora injúrias, insolências e insultos de todo gênero jorrem com inesgotável espontaneidade da alma humana, é infelizmente verdade que nem sempre nos vem à mente no momento exato o impropério mais bem-soante ou a ofensa mais pertinente
Schoppenhauer

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