AquaFrenzy
New member
The old rule of thumb is bigger is better when it comes to skimmers, is it a problem to run one that is much bigger than what your tank "needs"? thanks!
The old rule of thumb is bigger is better when it comes to skimmers, is it a problem to run one that is much bigger than what your tank "needs"? thanks!
should I base it on the light or heavy bio load?
What if you run TWO properly sized skimmers instead of one big oversized one?
What type of skimmer are you running?I'm running too large of a skimmer right now.
I set up a starter tank real cheap with elbow grease and dumpster diving. I ran without a skimmer for a year until I found a 120 that I can really get excited about; mostly to make sure I like the hobby before I get in too deep. So as I transition into the big tank, I'm using its 100+ rated skimmer on my under stocked 55.
What happens is it just chugs along, making froth, but never really produces foam.
There just isn't enough poo in the water to form a head. It's like the diff between a lager and a Guinness, both will bubble if you shake them but the Guinness makes a head that has real body to it, that you could scoop off with a spoon. Your skimmer should be removing the foam, not the froth. An oversized one has a hard time with that.
I've found carbon dosing helpful, cause it makes the skimmer more productive so the extra foam carries the poo out with it. But I still only run it 4-5 hours a day. I turn it on after work, and off before bed. In that time it cranks up a big head and gets the poo out of the tank, but after 3 or so hours it settles down and just makes froth mostly.
If you're shopping, you usually want to double the manufacturer ratings for tank size. You can look up diff skimmers on brs and they'll give the manufacturers rating, as well as what they recommend for diff stocking levels. Like, say you want a reef octo 2,000; coralvue may say that works for a 2,000 gal tank, but brs will rec it for a heavy-stocked 750, and an average 1,000. I'd even take a bit off the brs rec's too, just to be safe. You don't want to wind up underpowered, within reason.
What for?
I mean, people do. But there's a point of diminishing return. When you reach it the waters clean and the big one or neither little one is pulling anything. That's your sweet spot. Beyond it I think your just burning electricity.
What type of skimmer are you running?
Good to know.Reefocto 110, idk if it's the aquatrance pump or the model before that one. 5 poopers in the tank.
what he saidI agree with this. Also consider that volume rating on a skimmer is a proxy at best, and useless at worst; and that bioload is what determines the necessary skimmer size. Unfortunately there is no practical way to standardize bioload.
I have routinely used skimmers 'rated' for 3x the volume of a particular tank. On my current 90 gallon FOWLR, for example, I run an ASM G3 that is rated for 250 gallons and it works just fine.