I've been running a Vertex Alpha 200 skimmer for about 4 yrs and have never really gotten it tuned the way I want (dryish skimmate). I have a 200G tank, with pretty decent fish load (3 pyramid butterflies, borbonius athais, 3 bimac anthias, 2 yellow tangs, blonde naso tang, kole tang and mandarin). They also are fed pretty heavily via @AVAST Marine Plank autofeeder 2x day and manual frozen medley once per day, plus a variety of seaweed sheets. There are basically 3 variables I have to work with
1- Sump level
2- Wedge pipe
3- Pump intake nozzle
I've always assumed I understood how adjusting each of those 3 variable would change skimmer output, but man it seems like it just never does what I expect. Here are some pics of the setup. (this pic shows the carbon reactor running, but I only run it about 3 weeks every 3 months or so, currently out of service)
Untitled by Peter Young, on Flickr
and pump with intake nozzle
Untitled by Peter Young, on Flickr
So I'll address each of these variable, give my assumption, and if I'm wrong, PLEASE let me know
1- Sump level. This is the one I haven't really tinkered with. Designed to run at 10" depth, I run at 9" (I can adjust this by simply adding some more water to the system and raising the baffle). My assumption has always been that deeper depth (say 10" instead of 9") would lead to more bubble ejecting up the neck, leading to more water/less organics and wetter skimmate.
2- Wedge pipe. I've always assumed (sometimes tested) that a wide open wedge pipe (opening in the wedge facing the outlet) would lead to less water/ more organics in the collection cup.
3- pump intake nozzle. This one is really poorly explained in the "manual" and has been through a series of tests that always leave me more confused than when I began. Unscrewing the nozzle seems to lower the level of bubbles in the chamber. If opened too far, bubble come out of the skimmer output.
Right now I'm going through a skimmer cup a day, and when it fills up saltwater bubbles blow out the top and make a huge mess. Real pain. If anyone has any insight I'd LOVE to hear it.
Thanks.
P
Also, feeding vid here just for stopping by
1- Sump level
2- Wedge pipe
3- Pump intake nozzle
I've always assumed I understood how adjusting each of those 3 variable would change skimmer output, but man it seems like it just never does what I expect. Here are some pics of the setup. (this pic shows the carbon reactor running, but I only run it about 3 weeks every 3 months or so, currently out of service)
Untitled by Peter Young, on Flickr
and pump with intake nozzle
Untitled by Peter Young, on Flickr
So I'll address each of these variable, give my assumption, and if I'm wrong, PLEASE let me know
1- Sump level. This is the one I haven't really tinkered with. Designed to run at 10" depth, I run at 9" (I can adjust this by simply adding some more water to the system and raising the baffle). My assumption has always been that deeper depth (say 10" instead of 9") would lead to more bubble ejecting up the neck, leading to more water/less organics and wetter skimmate.
2- Wedge pipe. I've always assumed (sometimes tested) that a wide open wedge pipe (opening in the wedge facing the outlet) would lead to less water/ more organics in the collection cup.
3- pump intake nozzle. This one is really poorly explained in the "manual" and has been through a series of tests that always leave me more confused than when I began. Unscrewing the nozzle seems to lower the level of bubbles in the chamber. If opened too far, bubble come out of the skimmer output.
Right now I'm going through a skimmer cup a day, and when it fills up saltwater bubbles blow out the top and make a huge mess. Real pain. If anyone has any insight I'd LOVE to hear it.
Thanks.
P
Also, feeding vid here just for stopping by