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How to maintain old pond filter with no drains?
A couple of years ago I moved in to a UK house with a pond approx 16ft
x 10ft x 3ft, complete with no instructions. The water flows from the pond via a side-pipe (a few inches from the floor) in to the adjacent filter area, where it's pumped back to the pond using an argonaut J75 0.5hp external pump (3000gph). The problem I have is that a lot of books/sites I read seems to be about ponds with bottom drains and easy filter drainage, and my pond has neither. The filter area is a large (semi-covered) rectangle and has two rows of brushes, and some submerged material in bags before the brushes; but it doesn't seem to clean the pond at all: it's always very murky or green. I tried lots of floating plants last year and have also tried water changes. There are a few small koi and goldfish in the pond and they seem healthy and have survived the last couple of years. So, my question is, what's the best way to maintain this type of filter and clean up the water? Should I be replacing the bagged material and brushes? Buying matting? (and presumably putting it so all water has to flow through it?) Buy a proper pond vacuum and clean out the filter? Should I be cleaning everything lots? I can see lots of things I could try, but don't want to waste money. Assume minimal diy skills! Any info/sites would be useful since most of the information I see is about the biotec style of filters. My other question is about piping. The pump has a 1.5" outlet, but the return pipe is 1.25", so the pump is wasting energy. I assume to upgrade the pipework, I need to buy pressure piping and solvent weld rather than just buying cheap push piping from the local diy shop? Many thanks in advance, Ian. |
#2
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I would really like to see your pond and filter arrangement to be able to
give better advise. The brushes are there to collect fine debris from the water flowing through the filter box, or at least that is the use in multi compartment vortex filters, and need to be cleaned periodically, by hose or by moving vigorously up and down in a barrel of water. The intake would probably be better if it had a retrofit bottom drain installed to keep the bottom of the pond cleaner. The bottom of the pond, if it has more than just a little debris, 1/2 inch or more, should be cleaned by vacuuming. Complete water changes are detrimental. The filter bags probably have some kind of media in them that is used as the bio part of the filter, and it needs to be cleaned periodically with pond water to remove any debris, but not kill the bacteria that do the filtering. -- RichToyBox http://www.geocities.com/richtoybox/pondintro.html "I.Sheldon" wrote in message ... A couple of years ago I moved in to a UK house with a pond approx 16ft x 10ft x 3ft, complete with no instructions. The water flows from the pond via a side-pipe (a few inches from the floor) in to the adjacent filter area, where it's pumped back to the pond using an argonaut J75 0.5hp external pump (3000gph). The problem I have is that a lot of books/sites I read seems to be about ponds with bottom drains and easy filter drainage, and my pond has neither. The filter area is a large (semi-covered) rectangle and has two rows of brushes, and some submerged material in bags before the brushes; but it doesn't seem to clean the pond at all: it's always very murky or green. I tried lots of floating plants last year and have also tried water changes. There are a few small koi and goldfish in the pond and they seem healthy and have survived the last couple of years. So, my question is, what's the best way to maintain this type of filter and clean up the water? Should I be replacing the bagged material and brushes? Buying matting? (and presumably putting it so all water has to flow through it?) Buy a proper pond vacuum and clean out the filter? Should I be cleaning everything lots? I can see lots of things I could try, but don't want to waste money. Assume minimal diy skills! Any info/sites would be useful since most of the information I see is about the biotec style of filters. My other question is about piping. The pump has a 1.5" outlet, but the return pipe is 1.25", so the pump is wasting energy. I assume to upgrade the pipework, I need to buy pressure piping and solvent weld rather than just buying cheap push piping from the local diy shop? Many thanks in advance, Ian. |
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