DMBillies
Active member
I have an ASM G1-X. It used to have the stock output with the riser tube and sponge. I hate this because it causes a good bit of salt creep and the sponge gets nasty. Not to mention it isn't very consistent. I have every intention of fixing it.
I saw an idea that I thought would work so I tried it out. I just took a T, put it on the riser tube. On top of the T I put a PVC cap. On the horizontal output of the T I ran a piece of PVC into a 90 degree elbow and that puts the water back down into the tank. The stock riser tube would let me control the height of the water in the skimmer. This is basically a cheap version of the gate valve mod because it avoids the gate valve. I figured I wouldn't get quite as much control, but I figured it would be good enough. The problem, which I should have foreseen, is that the water falling back into the tank is pushing air down with it and creating some big bubbles in the sump. Microbubbles aren't a problem, but over time these bigger bubbles are going to create a salt creep problem. I could put a filter sock on it, but part of the reason I am getting rid of the stock sponge set-up is that I don't want to have to clean something out all of the time.
I looked at the gate valve mod on my Euro-reef to figure out how it got around this problem and I see that the sump water level is actually at the same level as the gate valve. So, once water clears the gate valve it isn't falling back into the tank from any kind of height, thus no bubbles.
I looked at creating a similar situation with the ASM, but the way it is designed, if I put the gate valve on the horizontal part of the "loop" as my euro-reef is, it is going to have to be at least 3-4" above the water surface. The ASM output blocks me from putting the T and lower.
Putting the gate valve on will slow the water and fill the plumping up before the valve, but the water will still free flow after the gate valve. Therefore, I think I'll have the same issue even if I do put a gate valve in. Is that right? On the other hand, I might think that eventually a lot of the bubbles would get pushed out of the plumbing after the gate valve and because it will be sealed from air on both ends (gate valve on one end and tank water on the other) the bubbles would stop. I'm not sure really sure about that.
I'd love any thoughts on this...
I saw an idea that I thought would work so I tried it out. I just took a T, put it on the riser tube. On top of the T I put a PVC cap. On the horizontal output of the T I ran a piece of PVC into a 90 degree elbow and that puts the water back down into the tank. The stock riser tube would let me control the height of the water in the skimmer. This is basically a cheap version of the gate valve mod because it avoids the gate valve. I figured I wouldn't get quite as much control, but I figured it would be good enough. The problem, which I should have foreseen, is that the water falling back into the tank is pushing air down with it and creating some big bubbles in the sump. Microbubbles aren't a problem, but over time these bigger bubbles are going to create a salt creep problem. I could put a filter sock on it, but part of the reason I am getting rid of the stock sponge set-up is that I don't want to have to clean something out all of the time.
I looked at the gate valve mod on my Euro-reef to figure out how it got around this problem and I see that the sump water level is actually at the same level as the gate valve. So, once water clears the gate valve it isn't falling back into the tank from any kind of height, thus no bubbles.
I looked at creating a similar situation with the ASM, but the way it is designed, if I put the gate valve on the horizontal part of the "loop" as my euro-reef is, it is going to have to be at least 3-4" above the water surface. The ASM output blocks me from putting the T and lower.
Putting the gate valve on will slow the water and fill the plumping up before the valve, but the water will still free flow after the gate valve. Therefore, I think I'll have the same issue even if I do put a gate valve in. Is that right? On the other hand, I might think that eventually a lot of the bubbles would get pushed out of the plumbing after the gate valve and because it will be sealed from air on both ends (gate valve on one end and tank water on the other) the bubbles would stop. I'm not sure really sure about that.
I'd love any thoughts on this...