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If the m3 of a filter is more than m3 of a fan, it's better then the other way around since the powerful fan would try to suck a lot of air through a small hole, correct? =)
My guess is that the filter should always have bigger m3 spec than the fan. Correct me if I'm wrong.
To your first question; yes, you would not want the fan to be more powerful than the rating of the scrubber. Here's my quote why:
The idea is to be as close to the HIGH end of that rating (but not over it.) If you exceed your m3/h rating of your scrubber (even after taking into consideration air flow reductions,) you'll be moving air through the filter so fast that it won't have adequate time to effectively trap those odor causing molecules in the carbon.
If you are too under-powered though; you're greatly reducing the efficiency of the scrubber, on top of causing your fan to work harder. That's not a good thing. On Rhino's website; they list that scrubber at a static 500 m3/h, not in a range. You're running a 280 m3/h fan for a scrubber that has a requirement something closer to a 500 m3/h fan, almost half of what it would need to operate closer to max efficiency. If it seems like your old no-name filter had a much easier time passing air through it; then it would probably stand to reason it was a lower m3/h rating than your new rhino filter.
As to this question:
My guess is that the filter should always have bigger m3 spec than the fan. Correct me if I'm wrong.
Yes, you wouldn't want to exceed the m3/h rating of the filter with your fan.
The filter's m3/h rating is dependent on factors like size, shape, and design of the filter hardware type and grade of carbon, amount, etc. Carbon can be granulated or powdered and what is used varies by manufacturer.
You size your carbon scrubber to your grow space, then the fan to the carbon scrubber.
Does that make sense?
:Cheers me Dears: