Product Description
The new stainless steel drum microfilter is specifically developed for freshwater aquaculture. It can adapt to high flow water treatment needs. When installed, it is paired with a buffer pool. The microfilter is installed on the inlet of the buffer tank. The inlet opening of the buffer pool should be closely aligned with the inlet of the microfilter. Prevent leakage of suspended solids in incoming water.
The stainless steel drum microfilter adopts a fully automatic cleaning design. Water enters the drum from the front through the opening of the buffer pool, and dirt is intercepted by the filter screen on the drum. As the amount of dirt on the filter increases, the filtering capacity of the filter decreases. At this point, the water level in the rear buffer pool decreases due to continuous pumping. After the water level sensor senses a decrease in water level, it starts the drum motor and high-pressure cleaning pump through an electrical signal. Both start working. The drum rotates under the drive of the motor, and the high-pressure nozzle connected to the high-pressure cleaning pump sprays high-pressure water mist. Rinse off the dirt on the inner wall of the drum. Falling into the collection tank inside the drum. Then discharge through the sewage pipe connected to the collection tank. This enables the microfilter to achieve automatic filtration of pollutants in water.
The stainless steel drum microfilter is made of high-quality 304 stainless steel. It has higher strength than plastic, so it can be made larger. Stronger processing power.
The filter screen of the drum microfilter machine adopts 316L high-grade stainless steel filter screen, which has good corrosion resistance. And it's easy to replace.
Scenarios of using stainless steel high flow microfilters in aquaculture farms:
Specification parameters:
Design flow rate: 250T/H
Material: 304 stainless steel (filter screen made of 316L stainless steel)
Filtering accuracy: 80 microns
Backwashing power: not exceeding 1KW.
Scope of application: Shrimp and fish farming.