Bio wheels

Great Lakes

Always do right, not popular...
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After a little reading on filtration, I have come to the conclusion that the new bio wheel craze has much merit. I know folks in the UK are less aware of this type of filtration than some members in the States. This might be due to the fact that Marineland seems to be pioneering this type of filtration. I am going to plageurize their work a bit to save me some typing...cause I am lazy.. :look:

There are three stages of filtration;

1) Mechanical filtration of water is done by passing the water through a screen, or a thin piece of sponge, or through a floss material, all of which remove pieces of debris from the water

(2) Chemical filtration of water is done by passing the water through small pieces of carbon or zeolite, which is a natural mineral. The carbon or zeolite remove molecules such as ammonia from the water.

(3) Biological filtration of water is done by certain types of bacteria that live on gravel, the surface of glass, ceramic ornaments, plastic plants, bio-balls, floss, or best of all on BIO-Wheels.


These bacteria are often called beneficial bacteria in contrast to the pathogenic or harmful bacteria that cause diseases. The beneficial bacteria in biological filters digest waste in the water by combining the waste that is dissolved in the water with oxygen that is also dissolved in the water.

So your typical filter would contain all three. A type of floss, the carbon media found inside the filter pack, or canister, and the bacteria flourishing on it. Your gravel and other items in you system will also include this bacteria. But due to the water movement through the filter, it will have an enormous amount of this beneficial bacteria.

This bacteria needs oxygen to perform its task of converting Ammonia into nitrites then into nitrates. Here is a couple of equations that quite simply express how this is done.

Using the usual symbols for Ammonia NH3, Oxygen O2, Nitrite NO2¯, and Water H2O, the chemical reaction is written as

NH3 + O2 a NO2¯ + H2O + energy

Or equivalently as a chemical equation like this

4 NH3 + 7 O2 = 4 NO2¯ + 6 H2O + energy

Other kinds of beneficial bacteria combine the nitrite and oxygen, that are both dissolved in the water, to produce nitrate and more energy. Using the usual symbol for nitrate NO3¯, the chemical reaction is written as

NO2¯ + O2 a NO3¯ + energy

Or equivalently as an equation like this

2 NO2¯ + O2 = 2 NO3¯ + energy

This brings to the forefront just how important oxygen is to filtration process. Here is where the bio wheels make their bid for supremacy.

A biowheel is placed into the return flow to the tank. Picture a mill wheel with water cascading over it. This is how a biowheel performs. Its constant turning allows it to have a higher concentration of oxygen available for bacteria to do its job. Studies have shown that a typical tank has 7ppm of disolved O2. Whereas a bio wheel has upwards of 200,000 ppm of O2 available for converting waste!

Run out and get yours now...
:lol:
 
Sounds good - but where would I fix them in a juwel tank that has an integrated filter column? :unsure:
 
"G", that is the crux, thaey are integrated into primarily marineland products at the moment. I am going to have to do some research on the Jewel. It sems a popular make across the pond. I am not familiar with it.
 
This biowheel does sound interesting, got a site or any pics of how they would be used?

Hey GL they are nice tanks (I got one...)

TRY HERE

OR HERE




:)
 
:( No bio's over here m8 (yet). I wouldn't use zeolite in a filter unless I had a severe ammonia problem. Using it as a matter of course will remove ammonia before the benificial bacteria can make use of it maturing your tank and filtration system. :/ Mac.
 
I actually dont much care for marineland products. Bio-wheels are all well and good, but the filters they come on are very... i dunno... pushy. I dont beleive in any need for any sort of mechanical or chemical filtration, and all my tanks currently run on this principal. The marineland equipment, however, is very set in its configuration: very little choice on media or filtration types. BOD or not, i find Aquaclear filters to be superior: they dont clog every 5 days like my penguin, there no carbon to beat out of a prefabricated cartridge, and you can pick any material you like to filter through. I even went so far as to yank the cartridge out of my Penguin 170 and put 2 sponges from the AC 300 into it. The article is very nice, but i really dont think the BOD relief from the bio-wheel is that deciscive. I'm sure it helps, but aqua-clears are cheaper, and i'm just downright poor.


Sorry, not to put anything down, very informative article GreatLakes.


Also, i can speak only for the Penguin filters and the penguin-based designs that are built into the Eclipse hoods. (i own a penguin 170, a 2 gallon eclipse explorer, and a 20 gallon Eclipse 2 hood)
 
i added biowheels to my wet dry system. i think they work great. don't have any problems with ammonia or nitrite in my 180. got about 20 of them. the water comes out of the overflow box through the floss into the biowheels and through a sponge filter into the sump. have a magnum at the other end with carbon and to help with circulating the water evenly throughout the tank.

maggie
 
yes, i have a biowheel in EVERY tank i own, i think its an essential in an aquarium, it always keeps ammonia and what not stabalized. but i would NOT buy a seperate biowheel for your AQUARIUM, not pond, becasue, sometimes when you feed them, that biowheel will suck up some floating food. and the biowheel gets dirty and doesnt work as well, all of my filters are emperors or penguins, the best filters you can buy! In the usa of course, and those are standard with biowheels, marineland may not have all good products but they sure have the best filters.
 
I use the emperor 280 biowheel on my 44 gal, and i love it. It has an extra media cartrage that i fill with amo carb, and of coarse the regular filter cartridge. I haven't had a bit of problem with it.

Reef- what did your lfs tell you about the wheel, as far as changing it? I was told not to replace it unless it tears. It has gotten pretty dirty, but it spins really good as long as i keep the spray bar cleaned out. I was also told never to clean it. Just curious.
 
Given the longevity of the fish keeping hobby, you would think that by now there would be some stardardized method/procedure for comparing/benchmarking filtration mechanisms. It seems what is needed is a general chart to allow easy, quick comparison. For example:

Each filter mechanism would have a 0-10 score for each of the following

Bio Filtration effectiveness: 6
Mech FIlteration effectiveness: 0
Chemical Filtration: 0
Cleaning ease: 5
Cleaning Frequency: 2
Tank size coverage : 10-100Gals
required maintenance: 4
Should be used with: Separte CHem and Mech filter
...
...
Overal Weighted Ranking: 3

Such a chart would be great for a FAQ.


I sure these question will come up repeatedly and such a chart would save all a lot of time/trouble long term.

Just a thought.
 
There are a few bio wheels filtering :/ :crazy: :p there way into the uk market, i havent actually used one but i have spoken to people that have and they seem impressed. It takes a while for stuff to make its way over the pond but we get there eventually.
 
what ones are available in the uk! and what does a bio wheel look like anyone got a pic! :thumbs:
 
Ive got 2-Penguin 330's on my 55 gallon and a 125 on my 29 gallon. They work great, but the only problem with mine is that my 125 got kind of gunked up and the bio wheel quit turning due to lack of flow. I had to take the unit out and clean everything out really good, and by this time the bacteria on the wheel had died. Owell it got started up fast. The 330's have baskets which I am using for carbon and to put my crushed coral in. It also has a neat little option that lets you pull the intake tube up to decrease flow while youre feeding so it doesnt get all sucked up into the filter. :thumbs:

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cool pics! so what does the toy car do then! :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: not seen anything like this setup in the uk! shame really cos its looks good, epes after reading all the bumff on it! how wide is your tank, dose not look wide with the wheel setup on the tank!
 
Oh, it looks small because that is just one hood out of two. The tank is 4 feet long and 13 inches wide. When I said I have 2 bio wheels, I mean I have 2 units that have 2 actual bio wheels a peice. :p

post-22-1040171251.jpg


Heres a pic with just one of them, I took that a couple days before I put the second unit in on the other side.
 

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