Brooklyn Aquarium Society - Public Forum

Brooklyn Aquarium Society - Public Forum (http://forum.brooklynaquariumsociety.org/index.php)
-   General Discussion (http://forum.brooklynaquariumsociety.org/forumdisplay.php?f=4)
-   -   Aerator (http://forum.brooklynaquariumsociety.org/showthread.php?t=1399)

john fox February 23rd, 2013 09:02 PM

Aerator
 
Is it absolutely necessary to have an airstone in a fish tank if so why🐬🐬🌊🐟🐠

xoomer February 23rd, 2013 10:02 PM

Airstones are mostly useless in today's hobby. Notice I said mostly.

They are not used to inject air; they are 1980s way to provide circulation in the tank to bring water from the bottom to the surface so that it can exchange CO2 with O2 from air. This exchange happens at the very top of the water column (surface). Water needs to be circulated in the tank so that the bottom part of the tank doesn't become anaerobic and stagnant with little to no oxygen.

Welcome to 21st century, we not have powerheads and powerfilters. These are far more efficient at moving water around. They can move tremendous amounts of water, sometimes even up to 100X tank volume/hour. Do you want that kind of turnover, in most situations you don't' so pick a powerhead small/large enough for your setup; or go with multiples in larger tanks.

Keep in mind that in most cases freshwater setups require less "turnover" than marine counterparts. There is more but I hope you get the point.

There are 3 cases that come to mind immediately regarding usage of airstones. You'd still use them in tanks that require very gentle water flow (some planted or fry tanks) and in case of an emergency in tandem with battery operated air-pumps. The 3rd is as above but with bait buckets :)

Happy fishkeeping.

stevem February 25th, 2013 08:30 PM

so bubbles are just pretty

john fox February 25th, 2013 08:45 PM

Are those bubbles just pretty 😎😎explain the bubbles👺

xoomer February 25th, 2013 09:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by john fox (Post 2917)
Are those bubbles just pretty ����explain the bubbles��

Yes, they are just for look at this point. Whats there to explain :chuckle:

stevem February 26th, 2013 09:26 PM

they do add oxygen by breaking the water surface, so if you like the look use them as far as oxygen is concerned any hang on filter or wetdry, or anything filter that breaks the water surface will add more oxygen.

xoomer February 26th, 2013 11:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by stevem (Post 2924)
they do add oxygen by breaking the water surface, so if you like the look use them as far as oxygen is concerned any hang on filter or wetdry, or anything filter that breaks the water surface will add more oxygen.


They do add oxygen by breaking surface, agreed; but they are far less efficient than any powerhead/powerfilter/wet dry at agitating water.


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 01:56 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.

Page generated in 0.02634 seconds with 10 queries