13
ноя
13
ноя
Word of warning about buying dosing pumps from medical companies for reeftank use. Hospitals buy hundreds of thes pumps at a time for use within the hospital. They use them for a while then the equipment reps sell the hospital lots of new pumps, latest and greatest and take the existing pumps off their hands. These pumps end up in lots of places including eBay. These pumps are used for regulating liquid doses to patients including feeding tubes and IV's. Foxconn n15235 harakteristika foto gratis. They also freqently have drip alarms so if the pump runs out of fluids it alarms and usually shuts down. This is their purpose in hospitals.
IDoser 4.5 Cracked All.drg. Grauonline.de Video Repair Tool 1.9.0.1 +. (36.66MB ) I-Doser version 4.5 (cracked)+ over 200 doses. You high without the.i.
We're not in a hospital. Each time a pump is used for a patient it gets a new set-up which includes a new hose and tubing. One patient, one use. Identifix software. Many of these tube set-ups include the drip chamber.
An electronic eye reads the drips passing through the drip chamber. When used for aquariums we often are passing caustic and/or abrasive materials through the tubing (IE: Kalk) The kalk tends to cloud the drip tube so the machine can't see the drips. If it can't see the drips it alarms and shuts down. The material also abrats the tubing and wears it out. In a hospital, one tube usualy gets hours of use, not weeks and months. For reeftank use, tubing wears out and pumps fluids on the floor, not the tank.
Now you have to find replacment tubing. Does this eBay deal have lots of extra tubes? Oh ya.the pumps are vending machines for the pump companies to sell lots of replacment tubes at hospital prices.
Each pump has it's own brand of tubing so each patient get a new tubing set-up and other brands won't work with that brand of pump. So.final word is: Save your money a little while longer and invest in a pump that is rated for dosing caustic materials wether swimming pools or reef tanks. I have two of those things in boxes in the attic and ended up spending more money for two real pumps so been there, did that. Oh ya, my wife is an operating room RN on the heart team so she knows the routine also.
This is what I'm using on BJ's little tank the OEM SP100 ( $61 shipping was like $5 additional ) with the largest tubing. Made for continous use applications, quiet, no back siphon issues. Doses a fixed 5.6 ml per minute. Just calculate the number of minutes to dose the required or in combination with a type for redundancy ( if float switch fails it flows slow enough that high PH shouldn't be a major concern unless goes unnoticed for days at a time with a large top off container ).
Topoff container can be remote if needed can pump up to 25 feet. I'm using along with a AC Jr. I have it come on with the lights go out and ocsilate dose 1 minute off 6 minutes works great plus for additional redundancy if PH is too high then will shut it off.
Doesn't necessary have to been this redundant but the more the merrier. Word of warning about buying dosing pumps from medical companies for reeftank use. Hospitals buy hundreds of thes pumps at a time for use within the hospital. They use them for a while then the equipment reps sell the hospital lots of new pumps, latest and greatest and take the existing pumps off their hands.
These pumps end up in lots of places including eBay. These pumps are used for regulating liquid doses to patients including feeding tubes and IV's. They also freqently have drip alarms so if the pump runs out of fluids it alarms and usually shuts down. This is their purpose in hospitals. We're not in a hospital. Each time a pump is used for a patient it gets a new set-up which includes a new hose and tubing. One patient, one use.
Many of these tube set-ups include the drip chamber. An electronic eye reads the drips passing through the drip chamber. When used for aquariums we often are passing caustic and/or abrasive materials through the tubing (IE: Kalk) The kalk tends to cloud the drip tube so the machine can't see the drips.
If it can't see the drips it alarms and shuts down. The material also abrats the tubing and wears it out.
Word of warning about buying dosing pumps from medical companies for reeftank use. Hospitals buy hundreds of thes pumps at a time for use within the hospital. They use them for a while then the equipment reps sell the hospital lots of new pumps, latest and greatest and take the existing pumps off their hands. These pumps end up in lots of places including eBay. These pumps are used for regulating liquid doses to patients including feeding tubes and IV's. Foxconn n15235 harakteristika foto gratis. They also freqently have drip alarms so if the pump runs out of fluids it alarms and usually shuts down. This is their purpose in hospitals.
IDoser 4.5 Cracked All.drg. Grauonline.de Video Repair Tool 1.9.0.1 +. (36.66MB ) I-Doser version 4.5 (cracked)+ over 200 doses. You high without the.i.
We're not in a hospital. Each time a pump is used for a patient it gets a new set-up which includes a new hose and tubing. One patient, one use. Identifix software. Many of these tube set-ups include the drip chamber.
An electronic eye reads the drips passing through the drip chamber. When used for aquariums we often are passing caustic and/or abrasive materials through the tubing (IE: Kalk) The kalk tends to cloud the drip tube so the machine can't see the drips. If it can't see the drips it alarms and shuts down. The material also abrats the tubing and wears it out. In a hospital, one tube usualy gets hours of use, not weeks and months. For reeftank use, tubing wears out and pumps fluids on the floor, not the tank.
Now you have to find replacment tubing. Does this eBay deal have lots of extra tubes? Oh ya.the pumps are vending machines for the pump companies to sell lots of replacment tubes at hospital prices.
Each pump has it's own brand of tubing so each patient get a new tubing set-up and other brands won't work with that brand of pump. So.final word is: Save your money a little while longer and invest in a pump that is rated for dosing caustic materials wether swimming pools or reef tanks. I have two of those things in boxes in the attic and ended up spending more money for two real pumps so been there, did that. Oh ya, my wife is an operating room RN on the heart team so she knows the routine also.
This is what I'm using on BJ's little tank the OEM SP100 ( $61 shipping was like $5 additional ) with the largest tubing. Made for continous use applications, quiet, no back siphon issues. Doses a fixed 5.6 ml per minute. Just calculate the number of minutes to dose the required or in combination with a type for redundancy ( if float switch fails it flows slow enough that high PH shouldn't be a major concern unless goes unnoticed for days at a time with a large top off container ).
Topoff container can be remote if needed can pump up to 25 feet. I'm using along with a AC Jr. I have it come on with the lights go out and ocsilate dose 1 minute off 6 minutes works great plus for additional redundancy if PH is too high then will shut it off.
Doesn't necessary have to been this redundant but the more the merrier. Word of warning about buying dosing pumps from medical companies for reeftank use. Hospitals buy hundreds of thes pumps at a time for use within the hospital. They use them for a while then the equipment reps sell the hospital lots of new pumps, latest and greatest and take the existing pumps off their hands.
These pumps end up in lots of places including eBay. These pumps are used for regulating liquid doses to patients including feeding tubes and IV's. They also freqently have drip alarms so if the pump runs out of fluids it alarms and usually shuts down. This is their purpose in hospitals. We're not in a hospital. Each time a pump is used for a patient it gets a new set-up which includes a new hose and tubing. One patient, one use.
Many of these tube set-ups include the drip chamber. An electronic eye reads the drips passing through the drip chamber. When used for aquariums we often are passing caustic and/or abrasive materials through the tubing (IE: Kalk) The kalk tends to cloud the drip tube so the machine can't see the drips.
If it can't see the drips it alarms and shuts down. The material also abrats the tubing and wears it out.
...">I Doser Version 45 Cracked Over 200 Doses(13.11.2018)Word of warning about buying dosing pumps from medical companies for reeftank use. Hospitals buy hundreds of thes pumps at a time for use within the hospital. They use them for a while then the equipment reps sell the hospital lots of new pumps, latest and greatest and take the existing pumps off their hands. These pumps end up in lots of places including eBay. These pumps are used for regulating liquid doses to patients including feeding tubes and IV's. Foxconn n15235 harakteristika foto gratis. They also freqently have drip alarms so if the pump runs out of fluids it alarms and usually shuts down. This is their purpose in hospitals.
IDoser 4.5 Cracked All.drg. Grauonline.de Video Repair Tool 1.9.0.1 +. (36.66MB ) I-Doser version 4.5 (cracked)+ over 200 doses. You high without the.i.
We're not in a hospital. Each time a pump is used for a patient it gets a new set-up which includes a new hose and tubing. One patient, one use. Identifix software. Many of these tube set-ups include the drip chamber.
An electronic eye reads the drips passing through the drip chamber. When used for aquariums we often are passing caustic and/or abrasive materials through the tubing (IE: Kalk) The kalk tends to cloud the drip tube so the machine can't see the drips. If it can't see the drips it alarms and shuts down. The material also abrats the tubing and wears it out. In a hospital, one tube usualy gets hours of use, not weeks and months. For reeftank use, tubing wears out and pumps fluids on the floor, not the tank.
Now you have to find replacment tubing. Does this eBay deal have lots of extra tubes? Oh ya.the pumps are vending machines for the pump companies to sell lots of replacment tubes at hospital prices.
Each pump has it's own brand of tubing so each patient get a new tubing set-up and other brands won't work with that brand of pump. So.final word is: Save your money a little while longer and invest in a pump that is rated for dosing caustic materials wether swimming pools or reef tanks. I have two of those things in boxes in the attic and ended up spending more money for two real pumps so been there, did that. Oh ya, my wife is an operating room RN on the heart team so she knows the routine also.
This is what I'm using on BJ's little tank the OEM SP100 ( $61 shipping was like $5 additional ) with the largest tubing. Made for continous use applications, quiet, no back siphon issues. Doses a fixed 5.6 ml per minute. Just calculate the number of minutes to dose the required or in combination with a type for redundancy ( if float switch fails it flows slow enough that high PH shouldn't be a major concern unless goes unnoticed for days at a time with a large top off container ).
Topoff container can be remote if needed can pump up to 25 feet. I'm using along with a AC Jr. I have it come on with the lights go out and ocsilate dose 1 minute off 6 minutes works great plus for additional redundancy if PH is too high then will shut it off.
Doesn't necessary have to been this redundant but the more the merrier. Word of warning about buying dosing pumps from medical companies for reeftank use. Hospitals buy hundreds of thes pumps at a time for use within the hospital. They use them for a while then the equipment reps sell the hospital lots of new pumps, latest and greatest and take the existing pumps off their hands.
These pumps end up in lots of places including eBay. These pumps are used for regulating liquid doses to patients including feeding tubes and IV's. They also freqently have drip alarms so if the pump runs out of fluids it alarms and usually shuts down. This is their purpose in hospitals. We're not in a hospital. Each time a pump is used for a patient it gets a new set-up which includes a new hose and tubing. One patient, one use.
Many of these tube set-ups include the drip chamber. An electronic eye reads the drips passing through the drip chamber. When used for aquariums we often are passing caustic and/or abrasive materials through the tubing (IE: Kalk) The kalk tends to cloud the drip tube so the machine can't see the drips.
If it can't see the drips it alarms and shuts down. The material also abrats the tubing and wears it out.
...">I Doser Version 45 Cracked Over 200 Doses(13.11.2018)