I am in the process of planning a new 120 gallon reef tank (48" x 24" x 24"). I am going to include a UV sanitizer and had some questions about sizing it. It will have a dedicated sump and 2 return pumps. From what I've been able to learn a UV sterilizer can operate on two different classes of organisms, each with their own requirements in terms of UV intensity and how often the tank's water needs to be cycled through the sterilizer. For single-celled organisms (bacteria, algae), there is typically a lower intensity, but the water needs to be cycled through more often due to the organisms' short life cycle. Larger parasites need a higher intensity, but don't need the water to be cycled through the sterilizer as frequently.
Typically, a system is set up to treat either one or the other due to the different requirements. In my case with two large enough pumps and the UV sterilizer on one, I could have two different modes to change the speeds of both pumps.
However, it seems to me that it may be possible to size a UV sterilizer such that it met both requirements. I've been looking at the Aqua UV models and their specs include the following:
And from the same doc, it looks like the 30,000-45,000 uw/cm^2 columns are appropriate for single-celled organisms and the 75,000-90,000 column are appropriate for larger parasites.
In my case, I could get a single 57 watt unit and run it ~1000 gph. That would cover the 75k-90k columns in terms of intensity and would cover the recommended gph rates for the 30k-45k columns for my size tank (which seems to really match a recommendation of 6-9x tank volume per hour).
Am I understanding the actual requirements here correctly? Can I actually continuously cover both classes of organisms with a single UV sterilizer and flow rate?
And a related question... Are there common situations where you want to make sure to turn the UV sterilizer off (other than when the pump isn't running)? When initially cycling? When dosing with a bacterial product? Or ???
Typically, a system is set up to treat either one or the other due to the different requirements. In my case with two large enough pumps and the UV sterilizer on one, I could have two different modes to change the speeds of both pumps.
However, it seems to me that it may be possible to size a UV sterilizer such that it met both requirements. I've been looking at the Aqua UV models and their specs include the following:
And from the same doc, it looks like the 30,000-45,000 uw/cm^2 columns are appropriate for single-celled organisms and the 75,000-90,000 column are appropriate for larger parasites.
In my case, I could get a single 57 watt unit and run it ~1000 gph. That would cover the 75k-90k columns in terms of intensity and would cover the recommended gph rates for the 30k-45k columns for my size tank (which seems to really match a recommendation of 6-9x tank volume per hour).
Am I understanding the actual requirements here correctly? Can I actually continuously cover both classes of organisms with a single UV sterilizer and flow rate?
And a related question... Are there common situations where you want to make sure to turn the UV sterilizer off (other than when the pump isn't running)? When initially cycling? When dosing with a bacterial product? Or ???