allan
Sun, 20th Dec 2009, 08:15 PM
Ok, here we go. I had a large piece of cruddy acrylic sitting in my garage and several hours to kill... and I need a phosban reactor. This is what I made which I guess saved me about 24 dollars so definitely not the way to go if you are trying to save a dollar... plus, not even sure it'll work.
First I cut the sheet down into six inch sections which I used a hot air gun (used for shrink tubing in electronic wiring) to heat and slowly bend the shape of the baffles. Oh yeah, I didn't want to fool with the tube so I took an idea that I read somewhere about a year ago on how to make an overflow and I modified that to suit my nefarious designs.
http://i621.photobucket.com/albums/tt295/alaviers/phosban%20reactor/Bending.jpg
I took pictures at each bend, but quickly grew bored with the whole mailing to yahoo and then downloading to the computer followed by uploading to photobucket so all you get is this one picture half way through.
http://i621.photobucket.com/albums/tt295/alaviers/phosban%20reactor/bendingcomplete.jpg
Ok, here's the final bend and I'll attempt to walk you through this. To the left is the incoming section where the water will come in. I will be placing a baffle to the right of that section to prevent the phosban material from passively filtering. The bottom of the baffle will be vented to ensure water flows under rather than over the baffle forcing the water to go through the phosban stuff... Pictures of the baffles below;
http://i621.photobucket.com/albums/tt295/alaviers/phosban%20reactor/baffles.jpg
Ok, below is the picture of the PR after I glued the sides on it. I used the aquarium safe silicone and mashed it over 24 hours with a ten pound... ahem, a fifty five pound dumbbell. Here's a lesson I'd like to pass on to you folks, don't rely on this. Use a vice clamp. I've got a few but never used them as I figured that the weight would be sufficient. This was not so, there were numerous sections in the important part where the seal was punctuated by a gaping hole. More sealant another 24 hours and I moved into the routing part.
http://i621.photobucket.com/albums/tt295/alaviers/phosban%20reactor/BRouted.jpg
Another lesson... unless you enjoy acrylic in your coffee don't put your cup next to your work while routing. Wow, thought I had a mocha cappuccino when I was through. I free handed the top side, but the bottom I had a ball bearing bit that allowed me to trim the excess.
http://i621.photobucket.com/albums/tt295/alaviers/phosban%20reactor/bdryrun.jpg
Dry run above, put water into it to check flow and below is a picture with the material in place. The section has the phosban material, the bottom section with similar baffles has the activated charcoal. I placed both in a filter bag for easy removal although this wasn't my original intent.
http://i621.photobucket.com/albums/tt295/alaviers/phosban%20reactor/brunning.jpg
I have an Aqua Lift pump that I planned on using to move water from the display to the reactor... but then discovered (or belatedly realized) that using a siphon through small tubing from the display to the fuge return section would be sufficient. And it works!
I haven't calculated how much flow I'm getting through the device, but I plan on checking that soon... maybe tomorrow after Avatar. I can slow the flow by cinching a knot that I placed in the line and increasing flow would be by adding another siphon line.
By the way, the picture below belongs up higher over the other one where I've routed the sides to size...
Will it work?
http://i621.photobucket.com/albums/tt295/alaviers/phosban%20reactor/BendedCom.jpg
First I cut the sheet down into six inch sections which I used a hot air gun (used for shrink tubing in electronic wiring) to heat and slowly bend the shape of the baffles. Oh yeah, I didn't want to fool with the tube so I took an idea that I read somewhere about a year ago on how to make an overflow and I modified that to suit my nefarious designs.
http://i621.photobucket.com/albums/tt295/alaviers/phosban%20reactor/Bending.jpg
I took pictures at each bend, but quickly grew bored with the whole mailing to yahoo and then downloading to the computer followed by uploading to photobucket so all you get is this one picture half way through.
http://i621.photobucket.com/albums/tt295/alaviers/phosban%20reactor/bendingcomplete.jpg
Ok, here's the final bend and I'll attempt to walk you through this. To the left is the incoming section where the water will come in. I will be placing a baffle to the right of that section to prevent the phosban material from passively filtering. The bottom of the baffle will be vented to ensure water flows under rather than over the baffle forcing the water to go through the phosban stuff... Pictures of the baffles below;
http://i621.photobucket.com/albums/tt295/alaviers/phosban%20reactor/baffles.jpg
Ok, below is the picture of the PR after I glued the sides on it. I used the aquarium safe silicone and mashed it over 24 hours with a ten pound... ahem, a fifty five pound dumbbell. Here's a lesson I'd like to pass on to you folks, don't rely on this. Use a vice clamp. I've got a few but never used them as I figured that the weight would be sufficient. This was not so, there were numerous sections in the important part where the seal was punctuated by a gaping hole. More sealant another 24 hours and I moved into the routing part.
http://i621.photobucket.com/albums/tt295/alaviers/phosban%20reactor/BRouted.jpg
Another lesson... unless you enjoy acrylic in your coffee don't put your cup next to your work while routing. Wow, thought I had a mocha cappuccino when I was through. I free handed the top side, but the bottom I had a ball bearing bit that allowed me to trim the excess.
http://i621.photobucket.com/albums/tt295/alaviers/phosban%20reactor/bdryrun.jpg
Dry run above, put water into it to check flow and below is a picture with the material in place. The section has the phosban material, the bottom section with similar baffles has the activated charcoal. I placed both in a filter bag for easy removal although this wasn't my original intent.
http://i621.photobucket.com/albums/tt295/alaviers/phosban%20reactor/brunning.jpg
I have an Aqua Lift pump that I planned on using to move water from the display to the reactor... but then discovered (or belatedly realized) that using a siphon through small tubing from the display to the fuge return section would be sufficient. And it works!
I haven't calculated how much flow I'm getting through the device, but I plan on checking that soon... maybe tomorrow after Avatar. I can slow the flow by cinching a knot that I placed in the line and increasing flow would be by adding another siphon line.
By the way, the picture below belongs up higher over the other one where I've routed the sides to size...
Will it work?
http://i621.photobucket.com/albums/tt295/alaviers/phosban%20reactor/BendedCom.jpg