Skipper the concept of bubbles size comes in two folds. as per holding organics and protiens its the same concept used by DSB folks, the smaller the bubble the more ya get per volume of water and thus the more surface area avalable. the second part is the total volume of air in relation to water with in the skimmer. It has been proven that anything over a 20% ratio will cause the bubbles to blend and become larger. this is the first hurdle air stones folks run into. They all of a sudden have this mass amount of bubbles and with the turn of a dial they can get even more. The first thought that comes to thier mind is Whoooo Hoooo I know it was my first thought.In reality what they should be doing is looking for the sweet spot, the spot in which they are injecting no more then 20% volume air, that way thier bubble size stays proper and they are actually getting somewhere.
Some folks think more is better and this is so far from the truth no matter what skimmer you are talking about. Most organics/protiens attach to air bubbles through a process of dwell time, as in it takes an amount of time for the organics to phsycally attach. You can make or blow as much foam and so on as you want but it aint going to matter one bit if you dont have the contact time. Also its not going to matter how many times you throw the tank water through the skimmer. Remember PROTIEN SKIMMING is two processes. Mehanical (un-attaching the organic mole from the water mole) and then he chemcial (re attaching it to the air mole). the process of mechanial stripping is done sucessfully by most skimmer types. Injector types (beckett's, down drafts, aqua c's, neddle wheels and so on) the injection of air being so radicully mixed with the water seperates the organics from the water, but sadly that is where most skimmer stop. From thier it should be all about contact dwell time for both air and water with the now seperated organic/protien. If this time is not allowed to occur then the organic/protien will just attach back to the water once it leaves the skimmer. You can do this process a hundred times a day but the result is going to be the same.
What they rely on is that force. they create a frieght train of water with a bumper of foam, they foam holds all that can sit ontop of it ( look at it like ultra wet skimming) what ends up in the cup is partiulate organics (which is good) but virutally no soluable organics. If you have a skimmer that incorporates the dwell time, bombardment rate and the correct amount of contact time you get it all and you dont get the vast majority of the live critters that are caught up in the freight train.
anyway just some thoughts
Mike