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Do "high flow" HMA filters exist?

JohnC

Member
Joined
14 Nov 2008
Messages
1,067
Location
On a mountain in the Highlands of Scotland
Hi,

I've been doing a little sniffing around HMA filters as i'm about to take over a discus tank. The water here is scotland really isn't that nasty at all and I could probably get away with just using dechlorinator as per usual but my research has got me pondering.

Are there any single stage (just for the chlorine and chloramine really) HMA filters that I could directly connect to the filling hose I intend to use on this 400L tank that won't restrict me to 2L per minute recommended fill rates?

If so i'd be tempted to use on all my tanks.

Best Regards,
John
 
Hi John, have you looked at any in line dechlorinators? There are some available for pond use but I reckon you could make one easily enough.
 
not high flow enough really. I just did a rough test of the taps here and I was filling a 5L watering can in between 10 and 15 seconds. So that's 30 Lpm to 20 Lpm. Obviously i could turn the taps down but i'd rather have something that was rated nearer the overall output so I wouldnt have to worry about measuring the flow on different tanks and taps as I filled.

The none pond ones i'm finding are between 2 Lpm and 7 Lpm. The one linked above is 9 Lpm.

Just had an interesting chat to a filter importer/supplier. I'm going to send them my request and they should get back to me with some suggestions from experts (interestingly they also supply the systems for maidenheads shops). I'll post their ideas here as I get a reply.
 
Hi,

I've been doing a little sniffing around HMA filters as i'm about to take over a discus tank. The water here is scotland really isn't that nasty at all and I could probably get away with just using dechlorinator as per usual but my research has got me pondering.

Are there any single stage (just for the chlorine and chloramine really) HMA filters that I could directly connect to the filling hose I intend to use on this 400L tank that won't restrict me to 2L per minute recommended fill rates?

If so i'd be tempted to use on all my tanks.

Best Regards,
John
Yes, but I'm not sure out Scottish water is what it used to be

8 years ago I had a ph of 7.0, kH of 1 and gh of 3

Now I have a ph of 7.9, kH of 2 and gh of 4, when I check the water website I see increased levels of heavy metals in comparison to previous years

I use a 3 stage HMA, it's better to take chemicals out rather than add in unnecessarily, and it's cheaper in the long term anyhows
 
Yes, but I'm not sure out Scottish water is what it used to be

8 years ago I had a ph of 7.0, kH of 1 and gh of 3

Now I have a ph of 7.9, kH of 2 and gh of 4, when I check the water website I see increased levels of heavy metals in comparison to previous years

I use a 3 stage HMA, it's better to take chemicals out rather than add in unnecessarily, and it's cheaper in the long term anyhows

they have deffo started using more NaOH to increase the PH of tap water without providing buffering as part of the lead reduction water treatment. They used to use a lot more phosphates for the same purpose. Most authorities are doing it. It was a surprise when I found out this since i'd been taking phosphate out of my dosing regimes for years (i'd last extensively checked edinburgh water chemistry bout 8 year ago).

i'm less worried about the metals since the plants tend to suck em out.

I'm just trying to think of a way to avoid dosing large amounts of Prime to the water column directly when hose filling big tanks. Especially since it's chloramine that is generally used over chlorine now.
 
My ph is 7, gh2, kh0-1 here in ayrshire :)

Sent from my GT-I9505 using Tapatalk
 
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