I bought the Interpet NeoAir Nano for £17.99 including delivery.
I chose this over one of the many Amazon unknown brands as I could buy it from a reputable retailer and like having a warranty I can claim on. I’ve had trouble with Amazon recently and claiming on warranties.
The packaging is quite nice if a bit of a puzzle to get into. Inside there is the pump and power supply. These are hardwired together so if you want to thread the cable through a hole in a cabinet you may have difficulty. The cable is 1m long approximately.
It also comes with a wee bracket to hold it to either the glass by suction cup or to the cabinet or a wall with included screw and washer. It also has foam feet so it can sit flat on a surface. Printed instructions are included which is nice.
It’s small, as expected. The power supply is also small. If you were to open it up you would find a printed circuit board with what looks like two large resistors, a capacitor, a smaller resistor (presumably for discharging the cap) and what looks like a thermistor. You would also find that the output side of the circuit board is 120v AC to drive the piezoelectric actuator, stepped down by the big resistors and smoothed by the cap I suppose. Obviously I didn’t open it up as that would invalidate the warranty, but if you did, that’s what you would find.
Here it is sat next to an APS AP-2B, a typical diaphragm based pump (this has two diaphragms to run two air stones). It also has a battery in it which is kind of nice but obviously adds some size and weight.
For noise comparison I used two methods: Method one, a free iPhone app. Method 2, my wife’s ears.
Method 1:
Ambient noise in my living room:
Just the general background level. No particular sources of noise, just my dogs breathing and the hum of the central heating.
With the APS pump on connected to 500mm of silicone hose via a check valve pumping into a 25l tank. Measured with microphone from 250mm away from the pump.
Swapped the pump for the Interpet NeoAir Nano. Everything else the same:
The iPhone app says that’s significantly quieter. I can’t verify the app’s precision but it’s definitely a lot quieter.
Method 2, my wife’s ears test.
“That’s LOADS quieter. The other one was doing my head in.”
She also remarked that she could only hear the bubbles in the tank now and not the pump. I agree. With my ear pressed to the pump I can hear it vibrating. At 1m away, it’s inaudible. Just the soothing sound of bubbles in the tank.
Air output is more than sufficient for the tank size quoted in the instructions. I’m going to use it for supplementary oxygen and will be running a filter anyway which provides some surface agitation so in my larger tank, it will be perfect. The APS pump is definitely giving out more bubbles which I expected but the trade off for silence is more than satisfactory.
In summary, it’s whisper quiet. Very pleased with it. 👍🏻
EDIT: found these videos on YouTube while looking at how the pumps work:
The check valves inside the housing which allow air to build on both the positive and negative peaks of each cycle are a nice design.