NO. it is not clogged, it is spent. the honeycombing is full.can you clean a clogged "can" filter by soaking it in lightly soaped water while agitating it and then thoroughly letting it dry?
just buy new activated carbon.I don't know much about carbon, however during one of my recent researching adventures, I read a *respected* forum member (maybe on another forum) say that they clean their carbon and re-use it 2-3 times, the trick was to used distilled water (ONLY) and throughly wash/agitate/rinse the carbon, dry and place back in filter. Be sure to let us know how it goes if you do this and it does work, would prove some peeps wrong !
You'll need to drill the rivits out and re-rivit when you put it back together, or you could try to screw it back together if you wanted... Be sure to only drill out the rivits that are connecting the flange to the filter (and any following that may prevent you for accessing the carbon), you dont want to drill them all out (i.e. the bottom!)!
dont you get a smell of burning when it exits the grow area.I make my own carbon.
Charcoal = carbon.
I burn wood, scoop out a shovel of the coals, remove air to extenguish.
Them pulverize an fill my DIY scurbber.
My diy carbon isnt as strong as the stuff from a fishstore, so I use about twice as much.
Depending on how well and what you make you carbon with it could be better than the ones at the store. Most filters use pelletized carbon. This type of carbon contains bonding agents, which increases its weight but reduces the actual amount of fixed carbon per gram, which is the real factor behind a filter's adsorption capacity. In simple terms, carbon pellets are glued together. Glue weighs a lot but doesn't filter anything.I make my own carbon.
Charcoal = carbon.
I burn wood, scoop out a shovel of the coals, remove air to extenguish.
Them pulverize an fill my DIY scurbber.
My diy carbon isnt as strong as the stuff from a fishstore, so I use about twice as much.
dont listen to anybody on here,Depending on how well and what you make you carbon with it could be better than the ones at the store. Most filters use pelletized carbon. This type of carbon contains bonding agents, which increases its weight but reduces the actual amount of fixed carbon per gram, which is the real factor behind a filter's adsorption capacity. In simple terms, carbon pellets are glued together. Glue weighs a lot but doesn't filter anything.
don't listen to anyone like you? for mechanical strength? what the hell does its mechanical strength do for you? Smaller particles provide quicker rates of adsorption. Note: Total surface area is determined by degree of activation and pore structure and not particle size. If they are bonded together they have lost surface area, which means you are losing filtering area!dont listen to anybody on here,
they are glued together for mechanical strength.
dried deposited glue weighsnext to nothing nothing.
i just put 15.5kg carbon in to a huge filter, how much glue? very little.
do you get a burning smell with your carbon filter?dont you get a smell of burning when it exits the grow area.
so you recommend to another member to wash their carbonExtruded activated carbon combines powdered activated carbon with a binder, which are fused together and extruded into a cylindrical shaped activated carbon block with diameters from 0.8 to 130 mm. These are mainly used for gas phase applications because of their low pressure drop, high mechanical strength and low dust content. They have a low pressure drop because the air flows through them much easier because you have lost surface area when binding it together. The low dust content is because of its high mechanical strength. I use Phat filters. which doesn't use pelletized carbon (popped and old one open to check). like I said in the first place binding the carbon causes it to have less fixed carbon per gram.
So who should not be listened to?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Activated_carbon
i am not a fucking idiotdo you get a burning smell with your carbon filter?
Here is another link for you! Lol! I see you are still a baby weegogs (avatar pic joke) so if there are any other topics you need cleared up feel free to pm me! Lol!
http://www.cameroncarbon.com/documents/carbon_structure.pdf
don't listen to anyone like you? For mechanical strength? What the hell does its mechanical strength do for you? Smaller particles provide quicker rates of adsorption. Note: Total surface area is determined by degree of activation and pore structure and not particle size. If they are bonded together they have lost surface area, which means you are losing filtering area!
Learn a little before you speak/type!
http://www.carbochem.com/activatedcarbon101.html
http://www.cefic.org/documents/other/acpaspentc_class1001.pdf
NO. it is not clogged, it is spent. the honeycombing is full.
you can stick it in the automatic washing machine but even that wont help.
in other words the carbon has come to the end of its life. if you wash it there will be one hell of a mushy mess.
it is very cheap to buy on ebay.