Don't believe a fluidized filter is the problem to all solutions when it comes to filtering.. It is indeed the most sufficient way with biological filtering.. But the whole concept is more developed for installations where this biological filtering doesn't occur naturaly and need to be forced. E.g. large plantless highly stocked Koi ponts, highly stocked barebottom or plantless large tanks.
But if you have sufficient amount of planted substrate in your tank, than this substrate will contain a motherload of nitrifying bacterias and plants taking up a huge part of this job. This combined with a well aerated trickle sump will be about the best filter installation you can make. Adding a fluidized bed section to a setup like this is a bit overrated and actualy an unnecessary input of energy which in bottom line is more a waste than a help.
Even better make it a lit planted trickle filter
🙂 It wont take op much space there are small plant species enough growing like mad emersed above the trickle part. Consuming a big part of the nitrate made in there.
And indeed a fluidized bed filter with K1 will make noise.. I gave it a try and if you run it with an air stone, you'le also hear the bubbles and the airpump run. Also tried a fluidized sand bed filter and this one is quiet.. But it is the same story if the process you're aiming for already is suficiiently completed before it hits the fluidized part it's nothing more than a waste of energy..
🙂 It can't be made better than sufficient.. I tossed them both, the K1 and also the fluidized sand bed. Why, it wasn't a usefull addition for what im running..
And this is what you should think over first.. What does it? And what does it need to do it.. And do you realy need it for what you are planning to run..
Bacteria are living entities as well, they need something to live off. So the ammount of bacteria multiplying will be dependence in correlation of the amount of food provided.
You are talking High tech tank, so this inevitably stands for highly planted tank consuming loads of nutrients. Than your sump will be provided with much less nitrite and ammonia than it would be with a low tech non planted tank filled with sand only and a large school of chiclids. You realy do not need a race car of a sump filter for a sufficiently planted tank, you probably can't fuel it anyway.
