Pond Van Advice
I have a pond that is 5m * 5m * (0.4m-1.5m) deep. It has turtles and fish
in it. I am looking for a pond vac to use with this, but there seem to be so many, with so little information. Can anyone here recommend what they use, or advise to not buy a model for any reason? I am located in the UK, so model available here would be helpful. Thanks Scott -- XBL : D0C RAY |
Pond Van Advice
In article ,
"KerplunKuK" [dot]uk wrote: I have a pond that is 5m * 5m * (0.4m-1.5m) deep. It has turtles and fish in it. I am looking for a pond vac to use with this, but there seem to be so many, with so little information. Can anyone here recommend what they use, or advise to not buy a model for any reason? I am located in the UK, so model available here would be helpful. Thanks Scott I use a Muckvac. Works well for me. Inexpensive, too. They sell on eBay and online. Do a Google search. -- To reply by email, remove the word "space" |
Pond Van Advice
"KerplunKuK" [dot]uk wrote in message ... I have a pond that is 5m * 5m * (0.4m-1.5m) deep. It has turtles and fish in it. I am looking for a pond vac to use with this, but there seem to be so many, with so little information. Can anyone here recommend what they use, or advise to not buy a model for any reason? I am located in the UK, so model available here would be helpful. ====================== Avoid the Cyprio hand pumped vac. It's totally useless and of very poor quality. We threw away $50. The place selling them would not take it back so lost our business. -- RM.... Frugal ponding since 1995. rec.ponder since late 1996. My Pond & Aquarium Pages: http://tinyurl.com/9do58 Zone 6. Middle TN USA ISP: Hughes.net ~~~~ }((((* ~~~ }{{{{(ö |
Pond Van Advice
"KerplunKuK" [dot]uk wrote in message
I have a pond that is 5m * 5m * (0.4m-1.5m) deep. It has turtles and fish in it. I am looking for a pond vac to use with this, but there seem to be so many, with so little information. I am located in the UK, so model available here would be helpful. I'm not sure what you might call them in the UK, but here we call them shop vacs or wet & dry vacs. One takes the pleated filter off to do straight water. With my 12 gallon capacity I can suck up a lot of muck before it is filled. I did the lily pond this spring 6' X 15' and it took only 4-6 tankful's. ~ jan ------------ Zone 7a, SE Washington State |
Pond Van Advice
On Mar 29, 12:02 am, ~ jan wrote:
"KerplunKuK" [dot]uk wrote in message I have a pond that is 5m * 5m * (0.4m-1.5m) deep. It has turtles and fish in it. I am looking for a pond vac to use with this, but there seem to be so many, with so little information. I am located in the UK, so model available here would be helpful. I'm not sure what you might call them in the UK, but here we call them shop vacs or wet & dry vacs. One takes the pleated filter off to do straight water. With my 12 gallon capacity I can suck up a lot of muck before it is filled. I did the lily pond this spring 6' X 15' and it took only 4-6 tankful's. ~ jan ------------ Zone 7a, SE Washington State While a bit expensive, there is a company in the UK which makes a wet vac with a sump pump inside. While vacuuming, a float switch turns on the sump which empties the vacuum through a 2nd hose. It vacuums and empties itself at the same time. I have two of them (for work). Of course, if you only needed a continuously emptying wet-vac, it's just a water pump with 2 hoses. ;~) ~~ |
Pond Van Advice
On Thu, 29 Mar 2007 22:03:25 CST, "NetMax"
wrote: Of course, if you only needed a continuously emptying wet-vac, it's just a water pump with 2 hoses. ;~) Can we be more specific about what brand of pump will work, or at least specifications of a pump. I thought about a well pump, but it had pressure controls for a home water system and I'm a bit lost as to how to get around that. Regards, Hal |
Pond Van Advice
On Mar 30, 11:11 am, Hal wrote:
On Thu, 29 Mar 2007 22:03:25 CST, "NetMax" wrote: Of course, if you only needed a continuously emptying wet-vac, it's just a water pump with 2 hoses. ;~) Can we be more specific about what brand of pump will work, or at least specifications of a pump. I thought about a well pump, but it had pressure controls for a home water system and I'm a bit lost as to how to get around that. Regards, Hal More specific.... Numatics, Somerset 01460 68480 if you wanted to go with the wet-dry sump vacuum ;~) The well pump pressure switch is easy to work around, but the pump itself is not suitable. An above ground needs to be primed and the foot valve would not suit your application, and the submersible is not practical. I could break the requirement into 2 components, the electric motor and the water pump, but if you're not technically oriented, you could alternately see what is locally available to you. Post the specs and then perhaps someone can make some comparisons with pumps they are using now. Alternately, gravity drain and using your pond's pump/filters are methods of dredging the pond, but these depend on the grade of your property, and the types of filters being used. ~~ |
Pond Van Advice
On Fri, 30 Mar 2007 15:14:34 CST, "NetMax"
wrote: More specific.... Numatics, Somerset 01460 68480 if you wanted to go with the wet-dry sump vacuum ;~) The well pump pressure switch is easy to work around, but the pump itself is not suitable. An above ground needs to be primed and the foot valve would not suit your application, and the submersible is not practical. I could break the requirement into 2 components, the electric motor and the water pump, but if you're not technically oriented, you could alternately see what is locally available to you. Post the specs and then perhaps someone can make some comparisons with pumps they are using now. Alternately, gravity drain and using your pond's pump/filters are methods of dredging the pond, but these depend on the grade of your property, and the types of filters being used. Thanks, You've given me something to work on. Regards, Hal |
Pond Van Advice
KerplunKuK wrote:
I have a pond that is 5m * 5m * (0.4m-1.5m) deep. It has turtles and fish in it. I am looking for a pond vac to use with this, but there seem to be so many, with so little information. Can anyone here recommend what they use, or advise to not buy a model for any reason? I am located in the UK, so model available here would be helpful. Thanks Scott Hi Scott :) Have a look at this............. http://www.water-garden.co.uk/Pontec_PondoMatic.php That's a new model, but I bought the earlier one last year on ebay for £88. Goos machine :) -- ßôyþëtë London, UK |
Pond Van Advice
In news:BoyPete Scribbled:
Hi Scott :) Have a look at this............. http://www.water-garden.co.uk/Pontec_PondoMatic.php That's a new model, but I bought the earlier one last year on ebay for £88. Goos machine :) Thanks. Seen one of those in my local Garden Centre and was unsure due to the cost and staff with lack of knowledge. I shall go tomorrow and have a good look and maybe buy. I'll report back. Thanks -- XBL : D0C RAY |
Pond Van Advice
Purchased the Oase Pondomatic and it does a great job especially for a sub
£100 price-tag and a 2 year warranty. Can't recommend highly enough. -- XBL : D0C RAY |
Pond Van Advice
KerplunKuK wrote:
Purchased the Oase Pondomatic and it does a great job especially for a sub £100 price-tag and a 2 year warranty. Can't recommend highly enough. Glad you're sorted :) -- ßôyþëtë London, UK |
Pond Van Advice
On Mar 28, 9:02 pm, ~ jan wrote:
I'm not sure what you might call them in the UK, but here we call them shop vacs or wet & dry vacs. One takes the pleated filter off to do straight water. With my 12 gallon capacity I can suck up a lot of muck before it is filled. I did the lily pond this spring 6' X 15' and it took only 4-6 tankful's. ~ jan ------------ Zone 7a, SE Washington State I have the muckvac -- the thing that is sort of water powered. It did okay but seemed to take a lot of water to do a simple job. I like the wet vac idea but have not tried it yet -- but I soon will if I find a long enough rigid hose. Check out my first attempt at a pond at www.marlia.com |
Pond Van Advice
I've been wondering what a pond van is and whether it hasfuzzy dice or not.
"BoyPete" wrote in message ... KerplunKuK wrote: Purchased the Oase Pondomatic and it does a great job especially for a sub £100 price-tag and a 2 year warranty. Can't recommend highly enough. Glad you're sorted :) -- ßôyþëtë London, UK |
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