Okay, let me give some details here. My 125g (48x30x21"h) has the following fish:
Royal Gramma (2")
6 x solar fair wrasse (2-3"ea)
1x Temmincki fairy wrasse (3")
Pyjama Cardinal (1.5")
2x yellow watchman goby (1")
1x Pacific Regal Blue Tang (2")
1x Striated Tang (2")
1x Yellow Tang (3")
1x Red Sea Purple Tang (2.5")
1x Lamarck's Angelfish (2.5", but fat, very fat... like a guppy)
I feed 2x a day. 1x with Spectrum dry pellets in the morning, then 1x Rod's Reef Frozen Food at night.
I WAS dosing 6ml Everclear (95% ethanol) per day until 10 days ago. My skimmer stopped producing as much 'coffee', and so I assumed the vodka dosing caught up with the output of the tank. My water has never been so clear. My nitrates and phosphates were 0. My fish were also getting infections from all the bacteria in some way. Nothing that wouldnt go away in a few days, but cloudy eyes here, itching, and flaking scales there... so I stopped. The fish are fine again, and I wanted to give a 'benchmark' of some sort. So I will test tonight to see what the 'initial values' from the skimmer working will be (I dont think the skimmer working for one day is going to factor in much). My hope is that I have some sort of detectable nutrient levels, representing what my tank would be with just the previous skimmer w/o vodka.... as my levels w/ vodka were 0. If I could get them back down to 0 (assuming Ill be able to test for something higher than 0 tonight) with say, just this skimmer and no vodka dosing... that would provide 2 types of info. To me, what goes in the cup isnt important, its what is left in the tank.
So this is what I woke up to this morning... think I set it too wet? notice the actual particulate matter on the bottom. This thing seems to get alot of hard particles out rather well. Of note, I shook a carbon chamber in the sump, and little black bits came out. I found those bits dried to the collection cup lid when I cleaned it. Not bad.
This skimmer seems to work on a different principle than most. Rather than extending dwell time with height or by recirculating, it seems to try to catch as much water in a foam head. Rather than trying to make the proteins gather at the top by having each bubble attract a payload on the way, it seems more like making cream into whip cream, and then forcing it up in a non-turbulent, uniform manner towards the top, as if to catch all the proteins in the head and not allowing them to drain any faster than the rate the foam reaches the top. I dont know if that makes sense to anyone, or if Im right, but I can watch bubbles rise in the skimmer, and from about 1/3 of the way up to about 1/2, the bubbles that are trying to flow upwards just cant... they reach the 'waiting line' on the way up. So the bubbles sit, waiting, and perhaps giving a pretty long contact/interface. There are 'bits' of organic material that get stuck in the foam and I see them trying to drain, but they cant because the column of foam is so tall.
It seems the cone shape forces the bubbles that would otherwise be gathered in the top few inches of a cylinder to stack up taller, so as drainage happens in the neck, the organics that do drain have more underneath to come in comtact with. In that respect, thats why I say it reminds me of a beckett skimmer. My recirc couldnt do that, and it had a relatively narrow neck for the amount of air I was putting through it... but its neck was alot shorter. The neck was 8" tall, 3.5" wide, and had 1200lph of air coming up so I had to run the waterline at the base of the reducer funnel area and I still got medium dark tea, although only 1/3 of a cup per day w/o vodka.
So this thing reminds me of playing tetris upside down, but instead of having the full screen, you have one only 1/2 as wide. Yeah, tough for stuff to get away from getting collected.