News
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Proper planning of the installation spacing for the aeration mixer
Getting the spacing right for aeration mixers is not a detail you can afford to overlook. Too wide, and oxygen transfer efficiency drops — your microorganisms starve. Too tight, and you waste energy, money, and headache. The sweet spot lives in a narrow band, and finding it demands real engineering logic, not guesswork.Read more -
Specification for the connection of aeration mixers used in series
Connecting aeration mixers in series sounds like a simple idea — put one after another along the flow path, let the first unit push water into the second, and so on. In theory, the mixing energy stacks up. In practice, series connections fail more often than parallel arrays because the interaction between units is far more complex. The downstream mixer sees disturbed water, not clean water. The upRead more -
Parallel installation arrangement of the aeration mixer
Running one aeration mixer is straightforward. Running four or six in parallel turns the whole project into a different beast. The mixers interact with each other — their flow fields overlap, their thrust vectors collide, and if you space them wrong, they cancel each other out instead of adding up. A parallel installation that looks good on paper can perform worse than a single unit if the layoutRead more -
Techniques for fixed installation of aeration mixer along the shore
Mounting an aeration mixer on the shore or the tank wall seems easier than a floor-mounted unit. No diving, no underwater anchoring, no guide rails. Just bolt it to the wall, hang it over the water, and go. That mindset is exactly why shore-mounted mixers fail faster than they should. The wall is not the floor. It flexes, it vibrates, it corrodes differently. And the way you mount the unit changesRead more -
Installation method for sub-bottom positioning of aeration mixer
Installing an aeration mixer on the bottom of a basin sounds like it should be simple — drop it in, anchor it down, walk away. But the reality is nothing like that. The basin floor is never perfectly flat. The water is never perfectly still. Debris settles, sediment shifts, and current patterns change with every rainfall. A mixer that is even slightly off-position on the floor does not mix properlRead more