I know how it is to have to give away fish. When we left Germany I left all my fish behind. I had had some of them for close to 10 years.<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=13783336#post13783336 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by edandsandy
We just sold all of Ed's fish, it was so sad...:sad1:
They have such a great personality.
They have a BETTER home now, they were relocated to a
1400 gallon FOWRL system!
It was like moving to the ocean for them.
We will have visitation rights :lol:
we are planning to see them this weekend![]()
You notice everything, don't you?<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=13824791#post13824791 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Untamed12
If you drain one of the skimmers to service the pump, will you be able to keep the other skimmer running?....or do you think you need a valve on the drain between the two skimmers?
Hey...I just noticed.... Those two skimmers have different top lids!
The valves are already there. You just can't see them in the pic due to the angle - they're behind the horizontal overflow pipe. I really like your idea, Untamed. If you are a skimmer expert, I'd much appreciate your feedback and advice, when I get this thing running. These are the first needle wheel skimmer I've tried. All my previous skimmers were Tunzes. Totally different concept.<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=13825058#post13825058 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Untamed12
Since you've designed to feed both skimmers with two independent pumps...you'll be in a unique position to test flow rates on the skimmers.
By putting valves on the outputs of your skimmer feed pumps, you could run one of the skimmers at say...500 gph...and the other at 700 gph. This would create different dwell times in each skimmer, making the entire skimming process more efficient. (I believe that different dwell times will actually pull different stuff out of the water)
There would a LOT of people very interested to know how the skimmers performed in that situation.