Hey, I've got an idea for cheap "dosing" or dripping (specifically, of kalk, but this could work for any additive) that I thought I'd run by you guys:
First, the problems with standard solutions:
- Drip tanks (e.g. Kent): Too Unsightly, too expensive, reservoir too small, especially if not using a sump, and especially if dosing kalk for topoff.
- Dosing Pumps: Too Expensive, Too loud, too hard to adjust, need periodic maintenence (replacement tubing, etc.)
- Standard float switch: Too fast for kalk and additives, only good for fresh water topoff.
So, what I was thinking of, is a fairly small (~1 quart) reservoir above the waterline with a standard inexpensive "drip line" setup coming out of it and into the tank. This reservoir would be small enough to either fit inside the tank hood/canopy, or above the sump.
There would be a float switch in the small reservoir. This float switch would control a standard powerhead and pump water from a large (i.e. ~5g) reservoir under the aquarium stand, and into the small reservoir. It would always keep the small reservoir "replenished" as fluid slowly dripped into the tank.
There would also be a float switch at the main waterline (tank or sump, depending on setup) to prevent overflow.
Advantages: Cheap, Quiet, easy to replicate for multi-part additives, reliable.
Disadvantages: ??? (have to DIY, I guess.)
One can envision a multi-chamber small "holding tank" that could dose many separate addatives at independently controllable rates very inexpesively. (1 pump + 1 float switch = ~$30 per "channel" of dosing)
Any thoughts?
Has anyone ever tried this?
Steve
First, the problems with standard solutions:
- Drip tanks (e.g. Kent): Too Unsightly, too expensive, reservoir too small, especially if not using a sump, and especially if dosing kalk for topoff.
- Dosing Pumps: Too Expensive, Too loud, too hard to adjust, need periodic maintenence (replacement tubing, etc.)
- Standard float switch: Too fast for kalk and additives, only good for fresh water topoff.
So, what I was thinking of, is a fairly small (~1 quart) reservoir above the waterline with a standard inexpensive "drip line" setup coming out of it and into the tank. This reservoir would be small enough to either fit inside the tank hood/canopy, or above the sump.
There would be a float switch in the small reservoir. This float switch would control a standard powerhead and pump water from a large (i.e. ~5g) reservoir under the aquarium stand, and into the small reservoir. It would always keep the small reservoir "replenished" as fluid slowly dripped into the tank.
There would also be a float switch at the main waterline (tank or sump, depending on setup) to prevent overflow.
Advantages: Cheap, Quiet, easy to replicate for multi-part additives, reliable.
Disadvantages: ??? (have to DIY, I guess.)
One can envision a multi-chamber small "holding tank" that could dose many separate addatives at independently controllable rates very inexpesively. (1 pump + 1 float switch = ~$30 per "channel" of dosing)
Any thoughts?
Has anyone ever tried this?
Steve