Taqpol
Well-known member
Hi all,
I currently have a recirculating EuroReef CS8-3. It is external of my 120 gallon SPS tank and fed by a throttled back Mag 5 (smallest pump I had on hand). Its definitely an older skimmer, so heres a picture:
I think this skimmer is rated for about 300 gallons of high bioload, but it is hard to find information on it since it was discontinued so long ago. It is perfect on my 120 gallon with a heavy fish load, but this summer I am upgrading to a custom 220 gallon (72"l x 30"w x 24"t) that will have roughly the same rock and coral load, but many more fish. I want to make sure I have a powerful enough skimmer to handle the increased water volume and bioload. Here are my two options:
Option #1: Upgrade the EuroReef.
I have always wanted this skimmer to be an in sump model, and I think the dedicated feed pump idea is pretty stupid, so I had a thought about modifying it to be a two pump skimmer (the current Sedra5000 recirculating pump and an aspirating feed pump). www.reefdynamics.com sells replacement pumps for EuroReef skimmers, so I was thinking of buying a EuroReef Modified Sedra3500 and the associated plumbing and uniseals to connect it to the skimmer body in such a way that it would pull in water from the sump and feed it straight into the body.
The problem with this is that I have heard that skimmers are designed for a certain volume of bubbles and increasing it too much can actually decrease the skimmers performance. I was hoping the skimmer experts could tell me what they think of my plan. Would my feed pump be overpowered or not powered enough? Would I actually see an increase in my skimming efficiency by going this way? Can someone estimate or give me better numbers on what my modified skimmer would be capable of, bioload wise?
Option #2: Just buy a new skimmer.
I am interested in the newer skimmers coming out to the market today, and I think I could swing one of these SWC Cone skimmers that is rated for a heavy bioload of 200 gallons. My questions about new skimmers, since I'm out of the loop, are:
Whats the best skimmer I can buy for my size tank and bioload? Which one is the most cost effective?
What makes Cone Skimmers better then the older type?
...And are cone skimmers worth the extra cost?
Sorry for all the questions!
I currently have a recirculating EuroReef CS8-3. It is external of my 120 gallon SPS tank and fed by a throttled back Mag 5 (smallest pump I had on hand). Its definitely an older skimmer, so heres a picture:
I think this skimmer is rated for about 300 gallons of high bioload, but it is hard to find information on it since it was discontinued so long ago. It is perfect on my 120 gallon with a heavy fish load, but this summer I am upgrading to a custom 220 gallon (72"l x 30"w x 24"t) that will have roughly the same rock and coral load, but many more fish. I want to make sure I have a powerful enough skimmer to handle the increased water volume and bioload. Here are my two options:
Option #1: Upgrade the EuroReef.
I have always wanted this skimmer to be an in sump model, and I think the dedicated feed pump idea is pretty stupid, so I had a thought about modifying it to be a two pump skimmer (the current Sedra5000 recirculating pump and an aspirating feed pump). www.reefdynamics.com sells replacement pumps for EuroReef skimmers, so I was thinking of buying a EuroReef Modified Sedra3500 and the associated plumbing and uniseals to connect it to the skimmer body in such a way that it would pull in water from the sump and feed it straight into the body.
The problem with this is that I have heard that skimmers are designed for a certain volume of bubbles and increasing it too much can actually decrease the skimmers performance. I was hoping the skimmer experts could tell me what they think of my plan. Would my feed pump be overpowered or not powered enough? Would I actually see an increase in my skimming efficiency by going this way? Can someone estimate or give me better numbers on what my modified skimmer would be capable of, bioload wise?
Option #2: Just buy a new skimmer.
I am interested in the newer skimmers coming out to the market today, and I think I could swing one of these SWC Cone skimmers that is rated for a heavy bioload of 200 gallons. My questions about new skimmers, since I'm out of the loop, are:
Whats the best skimmer I can buy for my size tank and bioload? Which one is the most cost effective?
What makes Cone Skimmers better then the older type?
...And are cone skimmers worth the extra cost?
Sorry for all the questions!