03LightningSVT
New member
Seems your looking for someone willing to do custom work $$$. Assuming you want acrylic, you could check a few places such as a local acrylic fab shop, melevs reef, or the big auction site.
people bought a backwards sweater. they sold billions.
meanwhile everyone already had one in their closets. it was a called a sweater.
whoever bought this somehow thought it was a novel idea.
when all they had to do was wear their sweaters backwards....
What you see is not a very good indicator of what is actually going on. No slick, OK, so where is it going? IF it is not removed quickly, much of the organics will get mixed back down into the tank. The result: no oil slick.
Have a read (sidebar) about surface renewal:
http://www.beananimal.com/projects/silent-and-fail-safe-aquarium-overflow-system.aspx
It's understood how a coast-to-coast with no teeth would be ideal for surface skimming, and in most cases it's not worth the trouble to add teeth to an overflow that doesn't have already have them. But it's just a bit comical on how far some go to try and push such a trivial point. A simple "It's not worth the trouble" would be a much better point.
So the teeth block a large portion of the surface water and push it back down into the tank, meanwhile clean water from below the surface is being pulled right past it between the teeth? Is a clean slot going to be more efficient? Sure, but I'd wager it's not going to be anywhere as significant as you're making it out to be.
You would think so, but it is seldom going to fly, considering there are sound principles that underlay the use of a "weir," and how it affects the surface skimming/surface renewal and how those two things directly affect the health of the system. It is a science, not opinions.
I have done many long comments concerning this. The short version is on Bean's website. It is sad that the arguments become somewhat comical, because the science is the science, and is not something that can be debated or argued. Most don't understand the science, which makes it hard. It would be nice to simply say it is not worth the trouble to have teeth, but folks won't accept that. They are conditioned by marketing hype that the teeth are needed.
I've never seen much of any science supporting just how much of a difference it makes in our application. I'm not saying it's not a more effective way to surface skim because I understand that it is, but where is the data to support that it's necessary in a reef tank? I'd be very interested to see it if it's available somewhere. I've not noticed any trend in members tanks where those with a smooth weir are different/better than a tank with a toothed overflow. I also don't think people are buying into "marketing hype" of some routed slots in acrylic as much as they are just trying to keep fish out of their overflow.
RCs very own overflow calculator on the front page tells me I only need 12 linear inches of overflow for the 800gph I run through my system, but again no explanation of how that was calculated or deemed the appropriate amount. Ask in the forums and you'll get several different answers including a C2C with no teeth - ie 72 linear inches of overflow - because "science" without any actual science.
However, removing the thinnest layer of surface water from marine aquariums, (physics,) yields the most organic rich water being fed to the skimmer, is interdisciplinary, (Physics and Chemistry.) That is because the organics are drawn to the surface of the water (Chemistry.) These sciences apply to marine aquariums, because all of the sciences apply to aquariums. QUOTE]
Sorry, not drinking that Kool-Aid. The factor that you fail to mention and consider that negates this supposed physics and chemistry theory in marine aquariums is total system flow.
Proper flow throughout the entire marine aquarium system (sump and display) will create a near homogeneous condition of everything in the water column including organics.
Back in the days of low flow systems your points may have been valid but not in todays high flow systems.
What do you recommend for minimum flow through the sump? 10x system volume?
What do you recommend for minimum flow in the display? 20x - 50x - 100x system volume?
Simply put, at the system flow rates used today, organics have no chance to collect or be drawn to the surface of the water.
the science is the science, and is not something that can be debated or argued.
I don't often post, and while I know this is not exactly what you meant, I'd like to point out what dangerous thinking this is. The entire basis of science is that it is to be continually argued, proven, dis-proven etc. Ideas, theory, and even laws of science are to be continually challenged and investigated, you simply can't say "Well science says this so that's what it is" because for a long time , the "best" understanding of "science" said that the world was flat, until science got better and that was proved wrong. Don't just take something as 100% true and infallible because ~science~.
An overflow with teeth and a proper fitting lid keep both fish and large snails out. The last thing anyone needs is a large snail getting stuck in a standpipe or a timid fish going down the overflow and perhaps into the sump where it could die, block a standpipe or get stuck in a return pump. Of course there are preventative measures one can take to minimize these "incidents" from occurring but redundancy is key when it comes to reefing equipment and if it can be achieved easily, why not?
All the science and chemistry is fine and dandy but I think the reason most people should use teeth on their overflows is to avoid issues related to what I stated above.
Even at the most basic level, folks know there are "dissolved organics" in their system, and they collect at the surface of the tank. The thicker the layer of water over the weir, the less surface water and the more subsurface water goes over the weir. Sub surface water has a lower concentration of dissolved organics.
More Kool-Aid, thanks but no thanks. The factor that you fail to mention and consider that negates this is total system flow. Proper flow throughout the entire system (sump and display) will create a near homogeneous condition of everything in the water column, including organics.
More Kool-Aid, thanks but no thanks. The factor that you fail to mention and consider that negates this is total system flow. Proper flow throughout the entire system (sump and display) will create a near homogeneous condition of everything in the water column, including organics.
The physics of weirs is a solid set science. Mostly it applies to calculating flow rates of moving bodies of water, but also involves the head height behind the weir. Chemistry is also a solid science. However, removing the thinnest layer of surface water from marine aquariums, (physics,) yields the most organic rich water being fed to the skimmer, is interdisciplinary, (Physics and Chemistry.) That is because the organics are drawn to the surface of the water (Chemistry.) These sciences apply to marine aquariums, because all of the sciences apply to aquariums. Science does not change because it is an aquarium. It is not data, or science, that is absent from this hobby, it is a basic understanding of the underlying sciences, that is absent, and how those sciences trump opinions every time.
The concepts spoken about, are drawn directly from physics and chemistry. A few of us have tried time and again to explain it, but since this hobby is "supposed to be fun," physics and chemistry take the "fun" out of it. But this is the most interdisciplinary and complex of all hobbies, because it is dealing with a living system, a biological system. Without some study into these sciences, one would always be questioning, and not understanding, the why of things.![]()